Tag Archives: Family

The First Time I realized I would never see my Daddys face again

I hate rainy afternoons. I think they remind me of the day my Aunt and her husband drove me home to meet the most heart scraping pain ever inflicted upon my life. The day I was told my Daddy died…

I still remember odd scenes from that day. The way the rain splattered shy rain drops on my aunts white car. The way the trees seemed to tremble when the wind touched their dripping leaves and how as a seven year old, they seemed too big for my eyes to swallow all at once. Certain moments from that day seem to have been lost except that time when I was sitting near to the T.V. unaware that my life was about change forever. I did not notice my aunt walk up to me so all I heard was a careful whisper in my ear saying “your father died today”. Whispered in the same way a girl might whisper to her best friend “I like the colour you dyed your hair”. The same way a lover might whisper “I really had fun today” after an amazing date.

I couldn’t move for a few seconds…and when I did the only place I could find solace in, were the bathroom floor tiles. My young life felt like a cruel dream and has ever since felt like that almost too often to smile about. I did not understand what the death of my Daddy really meant but all my mind kept telling me was “you will never see his face again”. The days that followed were a mist between being held by family and sudden realizations that for the rest of my life I would not ever see my father’s face again.

I cannot remember much about my father’s funeral except my sister’s hysterical cries from his graveside. But I do remember sitting on my mother’s lap and looking at his coffin thinking “they didn’t let me even see his face for the last time”. After his funeral, I remember having vivid dreams where he was weak and begging me to help him… and the pain always hit the hardest when I woke up.

I was seven years old. How do you mourn the death of your father at seven years old? I didn’t. Somehow I convinced myself that life is not this cruel and someday he will return. It has been fifteen years since his death and he hasn’t returned. I now have to face the fact that he is not ever coming back to me and have to start my mourning process. I do not how I will begin to make sense of my life without the hope I had been harbouring for fifteen years: just to see his face again.

How do I move on? How do I deal with the pain that threatens to destroy every good moment in my life? How do I make the little girl in me understand that Daddy did not walk out her life on purpose? How do I stop the irrational fear of feeling unlovable and constantly panicking that people will walk out of my life? How do deal with my denial that has kept me sane for fifteen years? How do I live knowing I will never see my Daddy’s face again?

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Filed under Family, Loss, Relationships

The First Time I Told My Mom To Back Off When She Didn’t Understand My Depression.

I’d had a rough week. Each morning I woke up morning devastated. About nothing.

These mornings everything I had to accomplish for the day seemed like looming, overpowering feats, completely unaccomplishable. Even small things: having breakfast, getting dressed, filling the hours with minor distractions until more hours came along. I wanted to exit this whole thing; this whole world of mine. Quietly take my leave without anyone noticing. Just quietly disappear and sleep and not bother anyone for a long, long time.

This month I’ll have been on antidepressants for two years and this was an uncharacteristic tough patch. My mum phoned just for a catch up, brimming with excitement about going to see Neil Diamond that evening with “the girls”, her three best friends who prided themselves on belting out songs and dancing with reckless abandon even though they were in their sixties. I sat bristling, waiting for her voice to slip into inane sympathy and concern and ask that ridiculous question she always asks, her code for enquiring about my mental state: “So, who are you feeling in yourself, love?”.  I mean what the hell does that even mean? How are you feeling in your self? What am I supposed to say? Answer truthfully? “Oh you know, I can’t cope with my life of absolute privilege and comfort, which millions of people would give their eyes for. I am incapacitated with grief which has no source in reality, I’ve been brought to my knees by feelings which don’t exist, a figment chemical imbalances in my brain. I don’t wish to carry on with this life. But hey, enjoy Neil, Sweet Caroline and all that!”

My real answer was blurted out with all the fury of a misunderstood adolescent: “MOM! You can’t just ask that kind of stuff on the phone! What am I supposed to SAY? Ja, I’m not doing well, OK? I don’t know how to talk about it and you just ask that same thing all the time!!”  She said she was worried about me and enquired if I had spoken to my brother and his wife whose son, my beautiful three-year-old nephew might be my favourite human on the planet. I didn’t speak to them about that kind of stuff, I kept my fun-auntie-self separate from this dark, ugly self. While I responded that I don’t like to bother them with this stuff and that they haven’t been through it so it’s tough to talk about, a courier package arrived at the front door and my mum had to deal with the signing etc. In the middle of all this she said that she wanted me to go and have a chat with my GP (who is fine for a doctor but I only see her for my script and we don’t really have a spilling-my-guts-out connection). I was angry that she could talk to the delivery guy while I was trying to actually articulate myself, a rare occurrence on this subject. I was angry that she hadn’t asked if my boyfriend was helping out because he was. He had been there every single step of the way. He sat next to me and held my hand while I screamed and shouted pure bile at him; he coaxed me back when I tried to ignore him and pretended to fly far, far away in my mind, he never, ever left when things were bad. He was on the front lines with me. And where was she? Asking her stupid question on the phone, taking a delivery, sending me off to the doc and going to Neil Diamond, that’s where.

She asked me to listen very carefully. She said that she was worried about me and that she want me to go book an appointment with the GP tomorrow and that I should up my dose if I wasn’t coping. I gave several noncommittal grunts. She reiterated several times but she had lost me, I was only saying things and had no intention of going to the GP whatsoever. She said she would phone me the next day.

I sat there, fuming. After a few moments, a sinking feeling grew in my gut that she was right, that I wasn’t coping. But then I was angry again. She wasn’t there, with me, planning baby steps each day. 1. Breakfast, 2. Get Out of the House, 3. Some Kind Of Thesis Work, Perhaps Easy Reading, 4. See Some Friends, 5. Make Sure to Buy Groceries. She wasn’t there, on the front lines, choosing to get up and get dressed instead of sleeping through the day so she couldn’t send me off to the doc like some fabulous Hamptons mom. Just then a text came through from her:

Mum

I’m   always with you   Love    Take good care    I Love you with all my heart    Speak tomorrow  Ma x

Before I could let the touching words settle on my burning mind I was feverishly texting back. I knew that you couldn’t go wrong being honest so I lay it down:

Me

I love you too ma but you can’t just try force me to go to the doctor every time your approach with talking to me doesn’t go well. I tried to change my dose with [family doc at home] last year and he refused and gave me tranquilizers and the whole thing made me feel like even more of a crazy. I’m working hard at it and I don’t have R270 to drop every time I don’t want to talk to you about it. I work at this every day and I’m not going to the doc because of one phone convo that didn’t assuage you enough.

“Shoowee”, I thought, “assuage”, that’s a big word, I definitely mean business”. But after that, the effects of the words didn’t concern me then. I just knew I had to show her the storm behind our conversation. I wasn’t actually concerned about how my mum would take it. Not in a callous way. I just didn’t have the capacity to juggle both of our feelings. I had to prioritize mine. Suddenly I felt stronger and started making breakfast. Feeling like I had to defend how hard I had worked every day made me go back to the basics and work on the small steps all over again: 1. Breakfast. Then suddenly, a response came through that I didn’t expect at all. It left me feeling startled, light, strong and loved:

Mum

Understood    I  respect you and hold you very tight x

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The First Time My Parents Got Divorced

The first time I realised that one is still a child at heart and that the very prospect of your parents getting divorced, your age notwithstanding, will affect you, I was 32.

Nobody ever told me that no matter how grown I was, I would still feel utterly crushed, that I would throw tantrums, be sad, upset and depressed and feel betrayed. I found out the hard way.

Now, let me make it clear that my parents never got divorced, in

fact we just came back from a family holiday together, they talk some, fight some, mistrust each other some,

but I guess for whatever reason they seem to tolerate each other.

When I first found out about it, and I am the only person who knows that my mother asked for a divorce, I was devastated and sad for my father. I don’t even want to relive that period in my life, it was awful to say the least.

Nevertheless, almost a year later, loads of crying later, I am gradually accepting that it is a possibility. I have acquired more wisdom and I realise that it will hurt if it happens, but there is not much I can do about it. They are adults, just like I am and I just have to make a conscious choice to have a happy marriage which I will.

I also made a conscious choice not to interfere in their business or take sides, which I had done throughout the ordeal. My peacemaking ends with me. I realised that sometimes, in trying to help and bring solace, one cannot prevent emotions from interfering. I am not married yet, but maybe there is a lot I am yet to understand. However, I constantly pray for a wonderful, wonderful soul, who will be my husband and the father of our beautiful children.

In the meantime I leave my parents to God, may God grant them the wisdom to make the right decisions. For myself I pray for peace and contentment with the decision that will be made.

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