He did his best: For other orphans on Fathers Day

My Dad when he was young

It seems fitting that the only photo I have of my father by himself is a photograph of a photograph.

I don’t hate Father’s Day anymore, but now Dad is gone.

I have written so much about my relationship with my biological father because it was so complicated. He wanted to love me, I think, but I represented a time in his life that he could never return to. He was a little mean and reclusive, but he also tried to show me parts of the country I had never seen. Several months before she died, he introduced me to my grandmother. He had just told her about me months earlier. She welcomed me into her home, my high school graduation picture on a side table among all the others of her many grandchildren. She gave me a $100 bill as a gift for graduating high school.

Before he died in 2010, each year, I struggled with this arbitrary holiday. First, I did not feel I really had a Dad, even if I had a father. Then, after I met him, it turned out that he hated holidays, so he couldn’t be a container for my desire to celebrate him. I knew when I was younger that I picked complicated and often unavailable partners for this reason. It seemed normal and familiar for a man to reject me. Love was suspect.

We reached a truce before his suicide. I was grateful. I sometimes mourn what could have been, but there is no changing what happened between us, and now it’s in the past. What helps is to think about the wonderful surrogate fathers I’ve had in my life, and the amazing Dads my friends have become and are becoming. They remind me that fathers don’t have to be toxic or twisted. They can be incredible, heroic or simply, and beautifully, normal.

Here’s what I wrote in a letter to him that I never sent 12 years ago:

I knew which gifts my mother had given me—endurance, faith and an almost extreme optimism—but there was no telling how much you would add to my life. I didn’t think when I sat down to write you the first letter—which you ignored—that I was hurt by your absence. There were the obvious things that your presence in my life would have prevented: homelessness, constant moving, poverty. But I didn’t seek you out to blame you for my childhood tribulations. To me, not knowing you was normal.

Most of my friends had fathers missing in action, too. It never occurred to me that if you wrote me back or if you called that I would be confronted with my anger towards you, that I might not be able to forgive you in this lifetime. I poured my life out on several pages, including my illustrations, a picture of me and some poetry. My mother prodded me at first, to be honest. It was she, after all, who told me that I should get to know you. And although I rarely listen to my mother, I figured that it couldn’t hurt me to listen to her just this once. I sent the letter and counted the days until I heard from you again.

As the days turned into a year, I made excuses for about a week before I could write you again. I didn’t want to include you in the ranks of the stereotype that says black men shun paternal responsibility. Maybe you were on vacation. Maybe you were busy. Then it occurred to me that maybe, and most likely, you just didn’t want to be bothered. After all, I had taken all of these years to write you when my mother had your address for years. I hadn’t learned, at the time, to surrender and have closure when I had already tried my best.

Instead, I was thinking like the average abused child—it was my fault. Maybe you were hurt and didn’t count my one collect phone call from a subway station in Philly when I was seven as an effort to know you on my behalf. So, I wrote you another letter. I decided, after weeks of mulling over what you might respond to, that the passive, sweet approach might have invoked some disgust in you. I am a black woman to my heart, needing a call and response relationship with everyone I invite into my life—but somehow my call to you had been disconnected.

I’ve been working on a memoir that’s centered around my relationship with my mother and she used to call me every Father’s Day and say, “Wish me a Happy Father’s Day! I was your mother and your father.” She’s not around this year to do that. And I don’t think too often about what my father’s relationship meant to my life. He was a safe harbor for me when he could be and when he wasn’t able to, he disappeared. I wrote more about him at the Good Men Project in March. The only thing I can think, now, is that he did his best. That will have to do.

A letter to the girl I lost, circa 2004

I’m doing some spring cleaning and finding old letters to myself that I think will maybe resonate for some of you. This was written back when I had two cats & was living in the Bay Area. I was in my twenties, about to embark on some life transitions not unlike the ones I’m facing at the moment. More on that later.

You should have learned to ride a bike down the steep hill on your block.

You should have had three or two meals a day.

You were so good, so studious and even faithful when things were difficult. & you made it, girl – through beatings, through slow soul murder, through strange worlds, bad times, embarrassing incidents, so much shame & so much pain.

You made it to the other side. You are free. If you’ll let yourself be.

Blow bubbles in the wind. Have ice cream for breakfast, waffles for dinner, soda and cheese for lunch if you want.

You can run up your credit, you can stay up ’til dawn when you want and sleep your weekend away. Turn off the ringer, hole up in your house with books, the sun, the cats, a soft wind, and so much peace that your heart might burst.

You can dance naked to 80s music if you want. You can dress up in 2 dresses and the Superman hat, jump up and down on your bed, sing as loud as you want in the shower, have a glass of wine, tear up all the awful pictures of you from ten years ago (or not). You can mourn safely the loss of men you once loved, the men you have to now keep at arm’s distance and the old you over the brand new you.

The new you — the growing girl with a stocked refrigerator, a clean car that shines in the 70-degree touch of sun, bookshelves with books you own and did not borrow and days full of more possibilities than you ever imagined when you were six. Life is beginning. And now, the fun starts.

Single People Stuff: Letters to yourself

The reason the financial decline of the U.S. Postal system makes me sad is because I adore handwritten letters.

I fell in love with them accidentally.

My mother started many of the mornings of my youth with letters that are currently pressed into my journals from over the years, with a penmanship so lovely pressed into the pages. She had worked as a secretary for many years and knew shorthand…so the beautiful loops of her handwriting looked like calligraphy. Because I came of age in the 1990s, before the Internet and I went to boarding school, the best and cheapest way to communicate with my friends was through written letters.

This note, which was circulated on Facebook as one written by Phylicia Rashad, made me start thinking about the letters I wrote to myself when I was younger and some of the best letters I’ve ever received. On my writing desk, for instance, is the only letter my father ever sent me, postmarked December 27, 1995.

There is some great wisdom to draw from in these letters, particularly the ones that I wrote as letters to myself. I’ll post a few of them here eventually.

I totally posed like that in my mirror at home in my 20s.

Dear Phylicia,

Romantic involvement distracts you and can blind you to what’s really in front of you. And what really is in front of you? You are. You don’t even know yourself yet. You think you know and you want to assert that you do, now that you’re a certain age, but you don’t. What’s in front of you is a whole world of experiences beyond your imagination. Put yourself, and your growth and development, first. There are long-term repercussions to what you’re doing now. Everything you do, every thought you have, every word you say creates a memory that you will hold in your body. It’s imprinted on you and affects you in subtle ways—ways you are not always aware of. With that in mind, be very conscious and selective.

With high hopes for you,
Phylicia

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