Well, now I've got me started.... Just one of those days when I can't stop thinking about my father. Mixed with the triumph and tragedy are the distinct pangs of regret. I've found (through reading) that most people who have ditched their fathers and burnt that bridge understand the peculiar blend of hatred and love that one can feel for a parent.
My father was like a moody dog; friendly at times, but I never knew when he'd turn around and bite me. His temper was sudden and violent, but wore off after he'd vented it. He was also addicted to gambling, in the form of poker machines (pokies, or whatever), and would take what little money I and my brothers had to gamble with when he was low on funds, making us believe that he could win a fortune and give us a hundred dollars each, or somesuch. My mother was addicted to gambling too, but she never took our money.
I still believe my father had no reference point to tell him it was wrong to take our money, make us pay for petrol when he had to make a small detour for our sake, and blame us for him having to pay child support when he and my mother seperated. He didn't know that chasing your kids around the house and kicking and hitting them wasn't very nice. Or maybe he did. Neither side excuses it.
By the time I was seventeen, I'd grown to despise him. It doesn't feel good to know I stood up to him, I was forced into it when I lost my first job because he was off gambling and couldn't drive me there. I told him he owed me the money I lost because of him. For him, an attack on his wallet was worse than punching him in the face, and he started screaming at me.
He and my mother were no longer on speaking terms, and lived an hours' walk away from each other. I made guerilla attacks on his house (with the aide of my sister, whose manipulative nature was the reason for my parents non-communication), smashing windows, stealing CDs, phoning his mother and mouthing off at her, stealing a table and giving it to my mother as a birthday present. Hey, call me sentimental, but she had always liked that table. I must have looked kind of strange walking back to her house with it. lol
But in the end he gave up. He gave me the money and a self-pitying note, and I haven't seen him since (I think it's been about 8 or 9 years). I'm not sure whether I should still hate him or not. It seems pointless. It's not like he was the only one to beat the hell out of me. He never hit my mother though. He was as afraid of her as I was.
You'd think someone whose father smacked him around wouldn't want to do that to his own kids, but he hadn't learned that lesson. His father was violent, his father's father was violent, his father's father's father was violent, etc. My mother's family was even worse, but I've got to go and bash my head against the wall 'til I stop remembering now.