More Notes to Myself

Saturday, September 09, 2006

Therapy

During some of the therapy I did a few years ago, I wrote the following letter to my dad.

"Dear Dad,

"I think the greatest thing you ever gave me was your love for music. Everyone knew how talented you were at playing the guitar and how beautiful and powerful your tenor voice was. I do wish you and I could have agreed on what kind of music was "of the Devil." We never were on the same page about that. But at least I was exposed to enough different kinds of music in my childhood that I learned which kind spoke to my own soul.

"Thank you also for all the opportunities for education that you gave me. Even with such a large family, you put eight of your nine children through college, including me.

"I regret that your job took you away from home so much of the time. I would have liked your calming influence in our home more than it was. I felt safer when you were home. I wish you could have protected me from some bad things that happened to me there.

"I regret that your perfectionism made you focus on what was wrong with me, rather than what was right and good. As hard as I tried to please you, it was never enough. Whether or not you intended me to get this message from you, I learned that if I am not perfect, I am worthless.

"I don't remember having much one on one interaction with you when I was a child. In fact, whenever I did get any attention from you, it made me feel uncomfortable and self-conscious. I remember when I was in the second grade and learned that my orthodontist had been killed in a plane crash. I was heartbroken and left the dinner table crying. You sat down with me and tried to console me, but it gave me such a strange feeling that I didn't know what I should say. So I said nothing. After a couple of minutes, you gave up and left me alone. I don't think you had ever sat down with just me before that.

"I wish I could have talked to you. I wish we could have spent time together. I wish you had read to me like you often did to Mom. I wish you had been able to see me in programs and concerts and other school events. I longed to hear you say that I had done a good job and that you were proud of me.

"I wish you had paid more attention to me when I was a child and less attention to me when I was a teenager. I wish you could have trusted me and allowed me to develop my independence during my youth. As it was, I felt handicapped as an adult.

"I wish everything for you hadn't been a question of what God wanted. I wish I had grown up in a world of color, instead of a world of black and white, good and bad, right and wrong. I wish I could have learned who I was, instead of what I should do according to someone else.

"Being a parent myself now, however, I have learned that things are never as simple as they seem to a child. I see that supporting a family requires that you work, and working requires that you spend time away from home and family, even if you would rather be there for your children. I thank you for always supporting me, even though it was at the expense of a relationship with me. I will always love you.

"Kae Loy"

Since this was therapy, this was not a letter I ever sent to my father. It was just something I did to express the things that I was never able to express as a child, so that I could feel more empowered as an adult. I even wrote a letter to him in the role of myself as a child, writing with my left hand, so that my words looked more like a child writing it.

"Dear Dad,

I want you to come home. I want to play games with you. I want to watch you build things with wood. I want to hear you and Mom sing "True Love Goes On and On." It's so pretty and I like the way you smile at each other when you sing, "My darling, I'll always love you." I want you to always love me."

"Little Kae Loy"

So, well, anyway... This is what I wanted to share with my own children about my father and my childhood and why I am who I am. It might also help to explain why all of you need therapy. JK :)

5 Comments:

Blogger Chelsee said...

Mom, I think that everything you wanted from your father, you have given to your children. You have given us the space to be who we want to be, and you are there to support us and tell us that "we are the best ones!" Even if you feel like you lived in a world of black and white, know that you passed on a world of color for your children to experience and grow from. Thank you for everything that you do for me. I have loved spending time with you, whether that is watching movies or traveling down to the Shakespearean Fesitval. I know that you love me and will be there for me if I need you. I love you so much! Thanks mom, your my mom! :)

12:43 PM  
Blogger -Wes- said...

I have very vivid memories of you reading to me and that you took time with me one-on-one to help me learn to read. I remember being frustraited as a child in elementary school and not feeling worthwhile and that you always made me feel loved and valuable. You put a lot of trust in us as children and that responcibility helped us to grow. I agree with Chelsee that those things you wished for your own childhood you have provided for your own children.

Mom, you did a great job raising us.

8:48 AM  
Blogger Allie said...

I've told you this before, but I really believe that you have always been my greatest fan. You have believed in me with grace and ease when it was hard for me to even believe in myself--like saying you knew all along that I would pass my boards when it shocks the hell out of me!

You were always an advocate for me too--always trying to give me things that I really wanted or that you knew would be good for me, even if it meant giving up something that you wanted for yourself.

I whole-heartedly agree with Kitty and Wes, you did a great job rasing us. You're the best one!

4:07 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I can understand where you're feelings are coming from but try to remember that with the kind of personality that Dad had, he was doing the best that he could to be a good father. (especially without the benefit of Prozac or some other medication to help his OCD) :) I admit that I didn't feel much of a bond with Dad either but for better or worse, he has become the voice in my head always pushing me to act better, be better, strive harder and not settle for mediocre.

But I agree with your children, you have used your experiences in your childhood to be a greater positive influence for them and I think that you are a great mom and
that you can be very proud of the way your children have grown up.

Mom use to say to me that you can tell what kind of a parent you were by the way you're grandkids are raised, and I think for the most part they did a good job. They weren't perfect but I know that they tried the best that they knew how to be supportive of all nine of us and raise us all to be positive contributing members of society.

NTD

7:56 AM  
Blogger Little Momma said...

Thanks, Nolana, for commenting on my blog. It means a lot. And thank you, Chelsee, Wes and Allison, for your comments, too. You probably already know that you made me cry.

7:37 AM  

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