gratitutde-a-thon day 47: the father daughter relationship

IMG_1076

My father never told me why he liked Jack Daniels, a stiff vodka martini, a Heineken better than he liked me.  And I could never figure it out.  And so we fought, he and I, and though I suppose you could say I lost, since he never stopped drinking, in fact, never would admit it was a problem, I’m pretty sure neither one of us won.

My daughter trusts my husband like a bird trusts its wings.  She knows that he will protect her from whatever’s under the bed, or clobber the robbers, she’s so convinced are lurking just outside of our house as soon as the sun sets.  She’s sure he has the answer to most any question she can dream up, and that he will be patient with her for as long as she needs him to be on days when her mood is ugly. That he will be at every moment of every soccer game, every basketball game, every school event, every inconsequential class breakfast, despite a bad schedule or a bad weather forecast. She also knows that he will notice and compliment her simply for breathing in and out. She knows he believes in her like a good Catholic believes in Jesus.  And she believes in him back.

I watch them like I am visiting another planet and observing how aliens interact.  I picture how I must look watching them sometimes– a puppy with his head cocked sideways, big eyes asking, “What is it you do when you’re human?  How come you don’t eat out of the bowl and why do you use your hands to catch a ball, when you could use your mouth?”  I’m very clear about the fact that I don’t get this relationship. I only know that I am grateful for it.  It’s so big and so filled with all that is good that I can almost feel what it must be like to have a father.

The guy had stuff, my dad.  Sure, he had plenty of stuff.  Psoriasis covered his body in scaly raw patches that made him itch and fell from him like an Aspen blizzard.  This disease with no cure brought him on more than one occasion to spend weeks on end in the hospital bathed in tar—yeah tar–one of the only treatments available back then.  And if that wasn’t enough, he’d also lost the sight in one of his eyes in his 30’s, the product of an accident, I think, and had serious problems with the vision in his “good” eye, so he carried with him like a cavernous backpack, the fear that he’d one day become totally blind and unable to provide for his family (he never did, which I take credit for, since I spent every girlhood birthday cake blow-out-the-candles-wish that he wouldn’t).  In hindsight, he likely had undiagnosed attention deficit disorder and anxiety and depression, too.  So, there was reason to self-medicate.  Plenty of reason.  But with three kids, and a wife, that’s more than enough reasons not to.

My son is unusually loving.  At 18, he will still lay his head on my shoulder as we watch a movie together, or wake up in the morning and give me a kiss.  We talk about what’s happening in his life, at school, in the world in a real way, and we always have. We tease each other until we laugh so hard, we need to run for the bathroom.  Sometimes I wonder if this is how it could have been with my Dad if he had been himself and not his disease.

For a long time I secretly, and then not so secretly wished my mom would divorce my dad. I could have a whole new life, without the crazy guy who would ground me for a month, after yelling at me so loudly, the walls would shake because I’d forgotten to replace the shampoo cap, but not for skipping 7th period science, who made every dinner time for a kid who hated all foods except spaghetti a loud and violent battle, with my sisters and I prisoners of war, and my mother an innocent casualty, who, for no reason would do the unreasonable, like make me go up to bed by myself refusing to allow me a night light in a creaky 100 year old house where Jack Nicholson in The Shining seemed about to appear behind every door. When it was clear she wasn’t going to divorce him, I wished she’d at least leave him. I would live with her, and no longer be tortured by the inconsistency and screaming fights that made my stomach ache and gave me headaches.  But my mother, who I loved more than anybody, would never leave him.   Not because she was a martyr, but because she didn’t know how to leave him, how to take care of her kids without a man, how to tell her Italian family, for whom the word divorce seemed not to have a definition, that this marriage was not a good one.  And so she stayed. And I created a new wish—I wished that maybe at least, maybe I was adopted (I wasn’t).

It was the unpredictability and fear, and total irrationality,  the not knowing that my father had an alcohol problem, that made growing up with him the hardest.  In my town, it was commonplace to have a martini or two come 5 0’clock, so much so that we never knew that my father’s anger and tantrums were because of his alcoholism.  And he went to work, never drank in bars, had a genius IQ, read the New York Times and the New Yorker cover to cover, loved classical music and theater, he couldn’t be an alcoholic, right? It wasn’t until my mid-twenties that it all became clear. My oldest sister, who found herself in therapy, uncovered what was really wrong with our father.

Once we learned what was underneath all the craziness, we talked to him, each of us, alone, together, in a group, in every configuration we could, dozens of times, over and over again, but he didn’t seem to hear. “I don’t have a problem with drinking—I love it,” he would say with glee.  “That’s funny, dad, gee, that’s a good one, a knee slapper.”  Is that what he though I was going to say during the hundreds of times that I tried to tell him how I felt. How bad I felt.  How bad I felt about myself.

It all came down to one thing and one thing only.  It was that I never mattered enough—NOBODY ever mattered enough for my father to change, to look at himself and who he was and the options there were for him to be in the world in a different, better, way.  For his family.  For himself.

But  for my daughter, it’s different. Her father is there. Her father is RIGHT there, with a love that is indestructible and unconditional, and IN HER FACE. There are no questions. Nothing to be confused about. A father and a daughter. I get to see what it’s like. I get t to see what it’s like to have a dad. Lucky. I’m really lucky. Because for my daughter it’s different. It’s so different. And that’s so good.

14 thoughts on “gratitutde-a-thon day 47: the father daughter relationship

  1. Dammit – another tearjerker, Toni. Plus that photo of Peter hugging your daughter is fierce. As is his love for his children. Fierce.

  2. Perhaps I should have waited until I got home to read this…rather than than choking back tears in the Honda service waiting room. As always, brilliant! Thanks so much for sharing your talent and your insights!

  3. Always great to read your stuff. I too grew up with an alcoholic father and a codependent mother. My Dad quit drinking in his late 40’s and did the whole AA thing but he resented having to. Everyone thought he was the greatest guy and he was, unless you were related to him. Keep writing it all down.

    1. EXACTLY–UNLESS YOU WERE RELATED TO HIM! totally. my dad was quirky and interesting and endlessly amusing, but, well, i’ve already said it. at least your dad went to AA, which means he acknowledged there was an issue. that helps, later when you’re unraveling the thing, to know that at least he tried. thanks for reading! xo

  4. So hard to read (in fact to be honest I *couldn’t* read it all; I just skimmed) because 1. it’s GOOD; and 2. unfortunately I only get to see the bad stuff for my kid and think what might have been if not for the fucking (since you like that word) bottle and mental illness and all of those other things that make for fabulous memoirs and blog posts and college essays but not for fabulous real life

    1. here’s the thing, janetta. it wasn’t easy having my dad as a dad, but there is something i am certain of, and that is that i am a really, really good person. i am an exceptional friend. i am a parent who tries extra hard. i am a good citizen of the world in terms of giving my time and my money to people and things that matter. maybe i wouldn’t be that person if i didn’t have that dad? i always try to remember where i started, to see how far i’ve come, as opposed to comparing myself to other people, who may have started elsewhere. that’s the only race you can run. but painful pasts mold you in both directions. it’s not all bad. you find your way. it might take a little longer, the path might not always be well lit, but in the end you notice that the long distance game usually makes you stronger, sometimes in the most beautiful of ways. xo

  5. I could barely get past the picture without tearing up – but then I read on. Man, oh, man, you are on fire with this, Toni. And it’s not just gobble-di-gook, it’s real, catharsis, emotional, awesome stuff. Thank you for your awesome stuff.

  6. I never knew your dad nor what you went through Toni and we were classmates. My Mom was the nurturer and like your father, my dad had a terrible temper. He was impatient with his children, worked too hard at his blue collar job, felt no gratitude and had no time for us or, had a short fuse for his 4 kids. I held that against him for the longest time and he in return, took 50 years to acknowledge that he had a problem and maybe, just maybe he did not treat us the way he should have.

    As he began to see his own mortality, he (finally) recognized his failings – to some extent. The question for me is, do I have the strength to forgive him before he’s gone? I don’t know. The memories I carry and the insults linger.

    I have a young daughter. Had her at 49 years old. She is my everything and we have this incredible relationship. Being an older first time parent, I am settled and secure in my own accomplishments, qualities and failings, but I can tell you that I am determined every single day tell her how much I love her, to teach her, to nurture her self confidence and tell her what she means to both my wife and I. How blessed and happy she makes us feel.

    Hey, maybe I learned some valuable lessons from my dad after all. Thanks ..Alan ’77

    1. awe, alan, that’s sad. i didn’t know that about your family either. you guys seemed pretty together to me. isn’t it just the perfect example of how we are in high school–we think everybody else has got it going on! your daughter is super lucky to have a dad who is so invested. she will get something you didn’t get because of the very fact that you didn’t get it. that’s what i find strange. because you don’t get something, you either can’t give it, or you make your life about giving it. and i can never figure out quite why you become one or the other? i am going to send you a private fb message. thanks for sharing, alan. give your little cutie a kiss from your old pal! xoxoxoxoxoxoxo

Leave a comment