The other story that is also true
As I launch my new blog, I'm going through all these old posts and deciding which ones to keep, this one keeps rising to the top of the pile. I wrote it in July, 2014, a month before my father passed away.
I like it because it doesn't pretend that my relationship with Dad was perfect. It was just a real father-daughter thing, sometimes bright and good, sometimes fraught with confusion and hurt.
I like it because I don't ever want to lie to you - because when we pretend things are perfect, we do one another (and ourselves) a disservice. We separate from the messy, human side of life. We lose touch with one another - and with the truth that no one is perfect and yet, even so, we are all worthy of love.---This morning, I awoke with profound clarity and peace around something that's been bothering me for a while. My dad's in a nursing home and I'm the only family member who visits him. It's complicated - and sometimes, it's really hard.Because often, rather than driving the hour each way that it takes to visit him, I'd prefer to stay home - to catch up on my (very) neglected housework, to focus on this book project I've promised to complete by summer's end. To spend some quality time with my husband.And sometimes, preferring that, I try to justify not going by telling myself the story of how my dad kind of emotionally abandoned me - and my sisters and our mom.And that story feels like a 'really good reason' to stay home and take care of myself. Until I do it, and then, all I can think about is Dad, sitting alone in that nursing home. And I get in the car. And I drive.
Who my dad was was hard sometimes. But sometimes, it was fine. Sometimes, it was amazing. Like in this photo. You can see how joyful he was. How much he loved being a dad.
If I was only the result of the things he did wrong, that would suck. That would be hard.But I am also the result of all that he got right - I am also the result of his devotion.
His devotion to family, which shows itself, even now - even when he can't move a single muscle and can barely speak - as he attempts to take care of us all by dictating letters telling us how much he misses and loves us.