WillowMarie
Silver Member
That first night, I laid there next to my mum in her bed, tears falling down my cheeks. Just thinking of my mum seeing my dad just collapsing and waiting for help to come it keeps haunting me. It was all I could think about those first 48 hours, what kept repeating in my head.
As days go by, I realize I hardly miss him. He was barely part of my life until sophomore year of high school. I don't really know what changed. Maybe I just started talking to him again one day. But something melted inside of him.
I remember how surprised I was one time after senoir year when I went to a work meeting at a different store. Never good with directions, I got lost on the way home. I started crying on the phone asking my dad for directions. All I wanted to do was pull up on the side of the road and curl up and sleep as it neared 11;30 that night.
Somehow, I eventually made it home after hours of driving. I opened the door to the front door and my dad stood at the top of the stairs. He looked concerned and took me in his arms, telling me he had been worried. It was so different from when I was growing up, I was in shock.
And that's when it comes back to haunt me. How I'd accomplish something in school and was excitted to tell him. I walked over to where he was watching t.v. on the couch and told him how my team had won the event for the book club. Who knows if he even heard me or if he just didn't care enough to respond. His eyes glued to the tv in front of him. He didn't even flinch. He didn't care.
Not until I joined feild hockey my freshman year. Then he was interested. But what did it matter then? I already grew up knowing he was more interested in my brothers who played sports more than me. Or maybe it was just because they were guys? I did hate my brothers for that. I swore to myself it was because they were guys.
But there were other times you were cold to me. When I needed someone badly. I don't care that I have a messy room, or the fact that it was my fault. Don't you think I'd know that? And I was just a child. I had stepped on a sharp toy and in tears, I walked down stairs to find you on the couch playing your video games. I told you my foot hurt because I stepped on one of my toys. And you just looked at me and yelled it was my fault, that I should clean my damn room.
The worst thing was knowing that no one came to my rescue. My mom never came running to hold me after my dad yelled at me. I just had to deal with it. Me on the other hand, remember going into my brothers room after something happened. He was curled up in his blankets, maybe crying. Throwing my arms around him, I comforted him. I guess in a sense I was the strongest in my family. I held myself together long enough to stand up for my brothers or mom and fell apart later.
Nobody else dared talk back to him. Just me. Not my mom. Not my brothers. I yelled back at him even though my body betrayed me and I started trembling and my eyes started to sting, a reaction that still occurs today, but to a lesser degree over time.
I argued back that he was wrong, I screamed that I hated him, I even threw my breakfest and plate at him from across the table one morning. Then he'd chase me. I may never know if anything would happen if he caught me. If anything did I blocked it out.
All I remember is running down the hall to my room slamming the door shut and locking it. And because of my messy room, sometimes stuff would get stuck in between the door and the hinges would break because I couldn't get the door to close.
There were two times I remember my dad getting violent. Both were with my youngest brother who I am so protective over. Both were on vacation. One was on vacation and he kicked my brother's leg from under the kitchen table during diner for some trivial reason.
The second we were in a one room hotel room and my younger brother let loose a swear word. My dad's hand came flying out and smacked him against the cheek. I jumped up and yelled, don't you ever touch him like that again!
My mom stayed silent as usual and one of my older brothers looked at me shaking his head from side to side. WhaT? What did I do wrong?! I didn't care if he turned his rage on me next! Could you imagine how my brother would feel if no one stuck up for him? How alone he would feel? He would feel like me...
Most of the time anything little would set him off. He'd yell at us when we were too loud. He would yell at us when our friends were over. He yelled at me when I tried to give one of my friends a piece of our pizza from diner when he had told me no. Grabbing my wrist that held the pizza, I don't remember if he got the pizza back. But it went around the neighborhood kids that my dad almost broke my wrist. I don't even know how accurate that statement was.
And this other time, he acted fierocious. Coming to pick me up from a sleep over, I still lay in bed. I sure he didn't tell me when he was coming to pick me up. The only thing I remember was me getting my things together and hearing his fist pounding on the door over and over, yelling at me because he had to wait. I remember being scared and instead of sitting in the passenger seat in the car, I sat in the middle seat. And I know he screamed at me on the way home.
Maybe one of the reasons I have become the way I am because I don't want to be him. Maybe my disassociation is a way to block out emotions when I feel uncomfortable. Maybe my self-injury was a way to dim my insides when I started banging my head against walls in 4-5th grade.
Maybe it was a way to punish me or maybe I deserved it back then? Maybe I thought I deserved it when I mowed the lawn, hate radiating through me because I had no choice. I'd walk under our plum tree getting to the grass underneath letting the tree branches scrap away at my arms, leaving a few long scratch marks. I was just so overwhelmed with hate and anger, it just felt so good at the time.
A way I later justified my cutting when I was in high school went back to my dad. All throughout school, we are taught smoking is bad; and that includes secondhand, too. I grew up believing my dad was going to eventually kill me from smoking in the house all the time.
Secretly, I wish he would just die. When I looked at my habit, cutting, it was my addiction, just like he had one. But mine couldn't kill others, it would just hurt me. I didn't care what others said, I knew it was better than my dad's smoking.
My mom had opened the door carrying her bags, my oldest brother close behind. I got up off the floor, and was a little confused as my mum headed up the stairs towards me.
"Your father had an accident on the beach and he didn't make it."
All I could say was holy shit and squeeze my mum. As the days pass by, I barely think about him. It's almost as if he wasn't even there to begin with. He was so detached from me for most of my life that without him in the way, it was better.
I could sit on the couch upstairs whenever I wanted and eat my food in front of the t.v. And best of all, no more smoking in the house. No more fear of dying from lung cancer or my asthma getting worse from the smoke.
Before we received the autopsy, I secretly wished you had developed lung cancer and that was the case of death, not a heart attack. The heart attack that was still from your smoking that had clogged your arteries with flith.
But sometimes I do miss you, dad. Or maybe just the fact that my "dad" is gone. I have no regrets. We had a better relationship the past few years of my life.
And you said you loved me the day before you died when mum called to say the vacation was going good. And so I'm thankful for that.That our last conversation, you said you loved me. And I replied I love you, too, dad.
As days go by, I realize I hardly miss him. He was barely part of my life until sophomore year of high school. I don't really know what changed. Maybe I just started talking to him again one day. But something melted inside of him.
I remember how surprised I was one time after senoir year when I went to a work meeting at a different store. Never good with directions, I got lost on the way home. I started crying on the phone asking my dad for directions. All I wanted to do was pull up on the side of the road and curl up and sleep as it neared 11;30 that night.
Somehow, I eventually made it home after hours of driving. I opened the door to the front door and my dad stood at the top of the stairs. He looked concerned and took me in his arms, telling me he had been worried. It was so different from when I was growing up, I was in shock.
And that's when it comes back to haunt me. How I'd accomplish something in school and was excitted to tell him. I walked over to where he was watching t.v. on the couch and told him how my team had won the event for the book club. Who knows if he even heard me or if he just didn't care enough to respond. His eyes glued to the tv in front of him. He didn't even flinch. He didn't care.
Not until I joined feild hockey my freshman year. Then he was interested. But what did it matter then? I already grew up knowing he was more interested in my brothers who played sports more than me. Or maybe it was just because they were guys? I did hate my brothers for that. I swore to myself it was because they were guys.
But there were other times you were cold to me. When I needed someone badly. I don't care that I have a messy room, or the fact that it was my fault. Don't you think I'd know that? And I was just a child. I had stepped on a sharp toy and in tears, I walked down stairs to find you on the couch playing your video games. I told you my foot hurt because I stepped on one of my toys. And you just looked at me and yelled it was my fault, that I should clean my damn room.
The worst thing was knowing that no one came to my rescue. My mom never came running to hold me after my dad yelled at me. I just had to deal with it. Me on the other hand, remember going into my brothers room after something happened. He was curled up in his blankets, maybe crying. Throwing my arms around him, I comforted him. I guess in a sense I was the strongest in my family. I held myself together long enough to stand up for my brothers or mom and fell apart later.
Nobody else dared talk back to him. Just me. Not my mom. Not my brothers. I yelled back at him even though my body betrayed me and I started trembling and my eyes started to sting, a reaction that still occurs today, but to a lesser degree over time.
I argued back that he was wrong, I screamed that I hated him, I even threw my breakfest and plate at him from across the table one morning. Then he'd chase me. I may never know if anything would happen if he caught me. If anything did I blocked it out.
All I remember is running down the hall to my room slamming the door shut and locking it. And because of my messy room, sometimes stuff would get stuck in between the door and the hinges would break because I couldn't get the door to close.
There were two times I remember my dad getting violent. Both were with my youngest brother who I am so protective over. Both were on vacation. One was on vacation and he kicked my brother's leg from under the kitchen table during diner for some trivial reason.
The second we were in a one room hotel room and my younger brother let loose a swear word. My dad's hand came flying out and smacked him against the cheek. I jumped up and yelled, don't you ever touch him like that again!
My mom stayed silent as usual and one of my older brothers looked at me shaking his head from side to side. WhaT? What did I do wrong?! I didn't care if he turned his rage on me next! Could you imagine how my brother would feel if no one stuck up for him? How alone he would feel? He would feel like me...
Most of the time anything little would set him off. He'd yell at us when we were too loud. He would yell at us when our friends were over. He yelled at me when I tried to give one of my friends a piece of our pizza from diner when he had told me no. Grabbing my wrist that held the pizza, I don't remember if he got the pizza back. But it went around the neighborhood kids that my dad almost broke my wrist. I don't even know how accurate that statement was.
And this other time, he acted fierocious. Coming to pick me up from a sleep over, I still lay in bed. I sure he didn't tell me when he was coming to pick me up. The only thing I remember was me getting my things together and hearing his fist pounding on the door over and over, yelling at me because he had to wait. I remember being scared and instead of sitting in the passenger seat in the car, I sat in the middle seat. And I know he screamed at me on the way home.
Maybe one of the reasons I have become the way I am because I don't want to be him. Maybe my disassociation is a way to block out emotions when I feel uncomfortable. Maybe my self-injury was a way to dim my insides when I started banging my head against walls in 4-5th grade.
Maybe it was a way to punish me or maybe I deserved it back then? Maybe I thought I deserved it when I mowed the lawn, hate radiating through me because I had no choice. I'd walk under our plum tree getting to the grass underneath letting the tree branches scrap away at my arms, leaving a few long scratch marks. I was just so overwhelmed with hate and anger, it just felt so good at the time.
A way I later justified my cutting when I was in high school went back to my dad. All throughout school, we are taught smoking is bad; and that includes secondhand, too. I grew up believing my dad was going to eventually kill me from smoking in the house all the time.
Secretly, I wish he would just die. When I looked at my habit, cutting, it was my addiction, just like he had one. But mine couldn't kill others, it would just hurt me. I didn't care what others said, I knew it was better than my dad's smoking.
My mom had opened the door carrying her bags, my oldest brother close behind. I got up off the floor, and was a little confused as my mum headed up the stairs towards me.
"Your father had an accident on the beach and he didn't make it."
All I could say was holy shit and squeeze my mum. As the days pass by, I barely think about him. It's almost as if he wasn't even there to begin with. He was so detached from me for most of my life that without him in the way, it was better.
I could sit on the couch upstairs whenever I wanted and eat my food in front of the t.v. And best of all, no more smoking in the house. No more fear of dying from lung cancer or my asthma getting worse from the smoke.
Before we received the autopsy, I secretly wished you had developed lung cancer and that was the case of death, not a heart attack. The heart attack that was still from your smoking that had clogged your arteries with flith.
But sometimes I do miss you, dad. Or maybe just the fact that my "dad" is gone. I have no regrets. We had a better relationship the past few years of my life.
And you said you loved me the day before you died when mum called to say the vacation was going good. And so I'm thankful for that.That our last conversation, you said you loved me. And I replied I love you, too, dad.
Last edited by a moderator: