earthquakefish
New Here
Hi, my name is David
I first want just want to say I'm a 39 year old male in Canada before I introduce myself anymore. I always kept family close; even though I'm keeping them at some distance now grappling with just myself in ways. That's been going on for some years now. Since my Dad died from an accident 8 and a half years ago. It makes me feel very lonely from them despite feeling it is healthy at times for me.
See when my Dad died, it was a boating accident all alone by himself. One moment he was there; the next moment he was not. No witness, no nothing. Just a phone message, to my Mum while she was on a walk with their dog, from a neighbouring cottager to start with that said, 'that he was paddling his fishing boat' (this was maybe 300' from our dock). Before my Mum got home, there was another message, the same neighbours phoned again saying as how they looked out now, and he was 'missing'.
Given some of my father's medical conditions, and his inability to swim, outside of a dog paddle, it was too easy for me to learn the implications just in word from a very badly worded phone call from my brother (he was in shock) where his wife called me back apologizing for how my brother expressed.
I was with my girlfriend, one year in, with some tribulations happening there, and the only driver at best 10 hours away (Quebec City to north of Peterborough). My Mum said, when I showed up, without sleep and a constant driving from a 10pm phone call (when my brother called) to 8 in the morning , she wasn't going to call me as she knew how long of a drive I had in front of me without help from anyone. She was going to let me get closer before she would phone.
It wasn't the phone call.
Two days watching police boats search in waters. I had showed up with no hope to the cottage (and I don't consider that sad, I consider it realistic given and accepting). I didn't know how to face my family, knowing at least my brother would hold hope even if he was disparaging in his call to me.
It's a lake. It's a small bay. His boat was left by him within eyeshot of our dock (I never saw the boat in water that time). Constant diving of police divers. Thank them for finding him and what they did. Still very hard when you don't want to accept the reality.
I've gone to see counselling a few times, in sessions, since. It has hardly helped. I always have had something go on emotionally since that makes me focus emotionally on something else. It took my 3rd encounter of sessions with the same therapist (probably 30 meetings at least before) to even realize I missed saying this to her, I was the one holding the binoculars the very moment when the police diver pulled my father out of the water. Only cause she said, this is the first time you said anything about your father's death; which patently was untrue. I had said, just had never said watching his face come up from the water, which made me want to express to her no further.
That was a couple years after he died.
During the time he died, I felt it necessary to quit college. As I could not focus on school. I had gotten in for photography, something I stumbled I'm good at, at a later age of 30, at that time just before his death. It was a cruel reality.
Since then my life has been upside down; I have found a vehicle in alcohol (if I want, and it's become too often). Depleted to working jobs where I didn't want to work before that I did, and can. So I can. And I feel stopped from seeing something else for me.
It makes me bitter.... jealous, angry when it's really just a step, no matter how hard, to get on with my life yet can't.
I first want just want to say I'm a 39 year old male in Canada before I introduce myself anymore. I always kept family close; even though I'm keeping them at some distance now grappling with just myself in ways. That's been going on for some years now. Since my Dad died from an accident 8 and a half years ago. It makes me feel very lonely from them despite feeling it is healthy at times for me.
See when my Dad died, it was a boating accident all alone by himself. One moment he was there; the next moment he was not. No witness, no nothing. Just a phone message, to my Mum while she was on a walk with their dog, from a neighbouring cottager to start with that said, 'that he was paddling his fishing boat' (this was maybe 300' from our dock). Before my Mum got home, there was another message, the same neighbours phoned again saying as how they looked out now, and he was 'missing'.
Given some of my father's medical conditions, and his inability to swim, outside of a dog paddle, it was too easy for me to learn the implications just in word from a very badly worded phone call from my brother (he was in shock) where his wife called me back apologizing for how my brother expressed.
I was with my girlfriend, one year in, with some tribulations happening there, and the only driver at best 10 hours away (Quebec City to north of Peterborough). My Mum said, when I showed up, without sleep and a constant driving from a 10pm phone call (when my brother called) to 8 in the morning , she wasn't going to call me as she knew how long of a drive I had in front of me without help from anyone. She was going to let me get closer before she would phone.
It wasn't the phone call.
Two days watching police boats search in waters. I had showed up with no hope to the cottage (and I don't consider that sad, I consider it realistic given and accepting). I didn't know how to face my family, knowing at least my brother would hold hope even if he was disparaging in his call to me.
It's a lake. It's a small bay. His boat was left by him within eyeshot of our dock (I never saw the boat in water that time). Constant diving of police divers. Thank them for finding him and what they did. Still very hard when you don't want to accept the reality.
I've gone to see counselling a few times, in sessions, since. It has hardly helped. I always have had something go on emotionally since that makes me focus emotionally on something else. It took my 3rd encounter of sessions with the same therapist (probably 30 meetings at least before) to even realize I missed saying this to her, I was the one holding the binoculars the very moment when the police diver pulled my father out of the water. Only cause she said, this is the first time you said anything about your father's death; which patently was untrue. I had said, just had never said watching his face come up from the water, which made me want to express to her no further.
That was a couple years after he died.
During the time he died, I felt it necessary to quit college. As I could not focus on school. I had gotten in for photography, something I stumbled I'm good at, at a later age of 30, at that time just before his death. It was a cruel reality.
Since then my life has been upside down; I have found a vehicle in alcohol (if I want, and it's become too often). Depleted to working jobs where I didn't want to work before that I did, and can. So I can. And I feel stopped from seeing something else for me.
It makes me bitter.... jealous, angry when it's really just a step, no matter how hard, to get on with my life yet can't.