--THINGS
FALL APART
…This
morning I woke up thinking about my dad, my biological dad.
He and my
mother divorced when I was five years old.
My step-dad raised me and I have always thought of him as my father.
My
biological father was a kind, quiet man.
I hardly knew him. In those rare
times we spoke on the phone, the conversations (or lack thereof) seemed five
times longer than they were—awkward silences, ruminations about the weather and
bowling scores.
When I was a
sophomore in high school, I lived in three towns in three months. My parents were moving around a lot, to say
the least. They planned to keep moving
and they said I could go with them or live with my biological dad, so I did
that. I moved to Mandan, North Dakota.
I was
sixteen. It was 1976. I had long, feathered hair. I wore puka shells, bellbottoms, platform
shoes and balloon-sleeved acetate shirts with floral patterns.
Boys in
North Dakota wore straight-legged Levis, cowboy hats, western shirts with
pearl-snap buttons and metal-tipped collars.
I was an
oddity.
The girls
there thought I was fascinating.
The boys not
so much. They hated me. Called me a “fag.” Wanted to beat me up. I spend five months trying not to get killed.
During that
time, I don’t recall doing much with my father.
I was like a renter who slept on the vinyl sofa and ate meals while my
father was at work.
It wasn’t
his fault. He just didn’t know what to
do with me, though his friends told me that him having me there was the
highlight of his life.
Five years
ago, he died of a prolonged struggle with prostate cancer. I flew out to see him two months before he
died and then for his funeral.
I’ve never
been one of those people who believed that simple biology makes you a son or
daughter. I’ve never understood why it’s
so crucial for adopted children to need to meet and know their biological
parents. To me, the ones that raise you
are your parents. Being a parent is an
act of service, of loyalty, of devotion.
Biology, when it comes to making a child, is an act of sex. It can mean something or nothing.
But I woke
up today thinking about my biological dad, wishing I had extended myself more
in getting to know him.
We look
alike. I have his nose and hair
line. I am a younger physical version of
him. Looking at myself in the bathroom
mirror after showering this morning was like looking at my father the last day I
saw him alive, when I helped him off the hospital bed and his paper sheath
flipped open and he hobbled to the bathroom.
I guess I’m
thinking about mortality. I’m thinking about
regrets and lost opportunities.
I’m trying
to learn from it all.
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