Tangled Web
I couldn’t put my finger on why I was upset. It was just
another phone call to soothe my mother’s nerves. But, my father had answered.
His tone was upbeat, and he shared that he was excited about buying a new
bicycle. He is 74, and is in better shape and spirit than most people twenty
years younger. He tells me he has signed up for a 10-mile bike trek and
sightseeing adventure along the Gulf Coast. It’s just his voice—there is
something pleading in it. He is trying.
Over a lifetime of calls with him, the effort has been
lacking. The calls ranged from the normal quick calls back and forth when I
lived at home, apprising him or my mother of my whereabouts, to violent, angry
calls, filling me in on all of my flaws, lashing out at the latest disappointment
he had been dealt in life, courtesy of me, his youngest daughter. There really
was no in between, except perhaps, for the years that he wouldn’t come to the
phone if I called, even if I pleaded. Sometimes
he would answer, and knowing it was me, he would pick up the phone without a
word and slam it on the nearest table our counter. He would call to my mother,
saying “It’s her,” in a tone that let
me know he couldn’t muster the energy to say my name.
This latest version of our calls is harder to understand.
While we don’t talk about anything that happened over the years, there is
something there in his voice, asking me to connect. Is this his version of an
apology? My emotional response is one I recognize—guilt. I feel guilty for not
giving more, for not just coming out and telling him I hear this in his voice,
that it’s all ok. I am angry and confused that I somehow still feel guilty,
that the repetition of the calls over the years has left me this way. No matter
what our calls were about over the years, I ended up hanging up the phone and
feeling awful. More often than not, I ended up sobbing. I don’t know how to
react or feel any other way. After I talk to my father, my knee- jerk reaction
is to examine what I am doing wrong, what is wrong with me.
That has never been a challenge.
That has never been a challenge.
The voice I hear in my head is his. Second-guessing every
single decision I make in life, constantly putting myself down, thinking the
worst. I have to battle to hear the faint whisper of my own voice, trying in
vain to protect me. Years of therapy finally helped me adjust the volume so
that on my best days, I hear my own voice clearly. But try as I might, I can’t
mute his completely. It will always be an echo, or a drumbeat, and at times it
still thunders so loud that it takes all of my energy to drown it out.
To keep myself from becoming lost yet again in guilt and
worry, I make myself remember everything over the years that has gotten me to
this point. I cannot connect any deeper with him because of all of those
things--very real things--that my mother and father both choose to place in
their world of denial. Drudging all of that up is necessary, but it takes its
own toll. Being raised in a family that chooses to not only deny the truth, but
bury and forget it altogether, can make you feel the need to return again and
again to your memories, to ensure that you, too, don’t get lost and buried.
There’s a nagging tug in hearing his voice age and my mother’s
become more frail. I watch as friends lose their parents and I debate in my
head if I am doing what I should. I stare down a rabbit hole that I have fallen
into many times, too deeply—worrying more about my mother’s or father’s happiness than my own. I stare long and hard,
and make myself back away. It is not a simple decision, it is a battle. I think
it will always be.
Even though it is hard, I have kept communication with them.
Most of this I have done for my mother, who needs the connection with
me. I love her, and I know that nothing that has happened was intentional on
either of their parts. My mother did not set out to marry an alcoholic,
unfaithful man. My father did not set out to be a bad husband or father. But
they both made choices that impacted my life and theirs. Those choices paved
the way for a very painful life for me, and incredibly poor self-esteem. Each
time I go through these feelings of guilt, I have to connect to a particular
memory to remind me why I have to keep my distance and take care of myself.
The one this week that helped was fairly recent, back in 2009,
when I was living in Charlotte and working for a women’s magazine. I had just
gotten back on my feet after a really horrible time with deep depression, that
had me still shaky at times. My mother and father were driving through town, back
to their home in Florida. Charlotte was merely going to be a pit stop, to see
me. My father’s birthday was coming up, so I had put together a gift for him,
trying hard to do something nice. It took me hours just to pick the wrapping
paper. We were to meet for breakfast, near my office, so I could go into work
right after.
I got there early, not wanting to disappoint anyone. Soon
after I arrived, my father called my cell phone, obviously angry, demanding
directions. His anger, as always, panicked me, and I scrambled to think of
street names and exits off the interstate. He wasn’t clearly explaining where
he was, and was cursing –every other word was “fuck” or “shit”. I was sitting
at a table in an Einstein’s Bagel’s restaurant, breathing heavily, trying to
calm my father down, and figure out where he was and how to get him to my
location. After ten minutes of back and forth, he angrily growled that I “didn’t
know fucking anything, and had ruined every fucking thing…just like always”.
The line went dead. I hadn’t looked up from my table during the call, and
realized that people were staring. I was still breathing hard, and somehow didn’t
realize I was crying. A woman next to me reached over from her table and put her hand on my
arm. As is my usual response, I apologized. She looked me square in the eyes
and said, “Please stop. Stop apologizing.” I just shook my head, for a minute
back to being five years old and in my father’s shadow. “I could hear every
word he was saying,” she continued, “stop. You aren’t the one in the wrong.”
I managed to thank her and then got into my car and fell to
pieces. Somehow, I was able to walk into my office 30 minutes later and no one
was the wiser. I have had a lifetime of experience in covering my emotions.
This, in comparison to many other incidents with my father, was
minor. This was nothing but words. I remember telling myself that on that
morning, over and over. Nothing but words, nothing but words. But words have
meaning. I believed he meant it when he said I ruined every fucking thing—always. Hearing things like that your
whole life makes an impact. I still have to remind myself—daily—that I am not
someone who ruins things. I am someone of worth.
It took me 38 years to begin to speak out loud and really
begin to tackle my depression and the reality behind it. I slipped during the
process and barely regained my footing. More than anything during all of the
therapy, the tears, the hard conversations, and reliving things too painful to endure once--much less countless times in my therapists office--the thing I gained that is
most valuable is the realization that I had to save myself. Actions I was
taking, that I thought were the choices that made me a good person--a good daughter,
were actually weighing me down more and more, and eventually pulling me under.
The people around me, who were supposed to love me unconditionally, who I
should have been able to rely on no matter what, were actually helping me
drown.
I almost did drown. It was a very close call.
There are moments today when I feel the weight, I feel the
water rushing over me. After a lifetime of fighting this, of battling
constantly to feel better about myself, to hear and trust MY voice, I sometimes
feel exhausted. I want to just settle in and let it all go. Just let the water
take me.
Then I remember how far I have come, and that once I
saved myself not too many years ago, I came out of the water, gasping and
barely alive, but I made it. I survived. It was a long, hard fight, but I
did it. So many beautiful things came after—that wouldn’t have unless I had
freed myself to allow them.
Unfortunately, guilt still lingers and my heart still
questions things. I have to go through this process—even after a simple 5
minute phone call-- to remind myself what it takes to be free, and how much I
can invest before it’s too much. It’s still a hard long process, but it is
worth it.
I am worth it.