There's an assignment, contest? underway to write an anecdote, description demonstrating what a swell bloke Dad was, is, has proved to be? whatever. Is this Father's Day? I'd planned to simply ignore the 'Day' as I do nearly all Calendar special days, including, to be honest, birthdays. But I've had a change of heart.
I loved my father. He's been dead about twenty five years. By any usual measure he was a sorry excuse for a Dad, especially if that is measured by whether or not he was provident. He was improvident. Love for a parent, however, really can't be measured with any meaningful accuracy by what they provided us. The only truly meaningful measure, I believe, is 'did the parent successfully impart the information that they loved us in such a way that there has never been the slightest doubt?' I have not the slightest doubt that he loved me. What I feel most deeply with respect to my father is persistent regret that I never made any effort to tell him how much I loved and appreciated him.
I've been haunted by memories of the last time I spoke to my father. It happened when I was sixteen, living alone in a boarding house in Neutral Bay, on Sydney Harbor from where I took a ferry everyday to go to work in the city. I had an accountant's clerk job in an electrical supply store in the city. Returning home from work, about to board the ferry, I was approached by my father who asked me for money. I have no idea how he discovered where I was, or would be. I doubt the meeting was by chance, as he was not the slightest bit surprised to see me. His trousers were held up by a men's necktie. In his right arm he carried a bundle wrapped with newspapers that clinked like the sound of bottles. I asked him what was in the bundle. "Company for the weekend," he replied. I walked away and boarded the ferry with my father following me. I ran upstairs to the top deck, almost ran to the downstairs nearer the bow, ran down and jumped onto the wharf trapping my father on a ferry he had no real intent to ride. I never saw him again.
However, I did receive communications from him, sent from Australia when I lived in New York City. By far the most dramatic of the two was a visit from a Catholic Nun (my family was notCatholic) who, she said, had to decide whether to take herleave to visit Ireland, or come to New York and personally deliver a message from my father. The two had met while my father worked as an architect (most likely as a draftsman) for a firm which built school houses for the Church. She told me she'd had his desk raised to accomodate his height. By that time I was probably thirty five or forty. Unhappily I expressed, as far as I can remember, no gratitude to the Nun. At that time, I guess, I was still frozen by unrecognized anger. He died, my two younger brothers told me, when I was about forty eight. The Nun never delivered an actual message; perhaps she judged that I was not prepared to receive any message. So, she served as the message. I've certainly never forgotten her.
Some years later I learned the concept in a formal environment, the est Training, that one must unreservedly love one's parents. There was a codicil: in the event of a monster parent, the love might need to be given from a distance. When he was in his early twenties my father had immigrated, alone, to Australia from London. He came with a degree in Architecture. Early in his career in America he worked as a junior architect on the splendid San Francisco Opera House. By an odd, perhaps even unbelievable coincidence I was twice on the stage of that imposing structure: once as an extra in Aida when I was in High School, and once again when I graduated from HS. Neither time was my father in the audience.
Barry
5 comments:
Barry, as always, your writing is extraordinary, thank you for sharing.... - Kelly
Wow, now there's an accolade for
the ages. Thanks! I'll try not to let
it go to my head, but instead see if I can
make another one it's equal.
Barry
I went to http://journals.aol.com/johnmscalzi/bytheway/entries/4281 to see if you had put a link there for this. You hadn't! You really must. I have very few "outside" readers, but with your permission, I'd like to point folks to this entry.
PS - My father was a monster. I suspect yours was more of a lost child. But you're right, the love is there, waiting, even when there's no safe way to express it.
~~Silk
http://journals.aol.com/bbartle3/Vengeance/
Sorry, I thought I sent it via email
Barry
Hello
this is Karan 19yr old boy from India.Do you know how much your writing made me cry??????
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