How Long Is Always?
It was the first message I had ever received from my father. Sadly, it was also the last. A five-minute memory.
It was just one line in a birthday card. “The reason I never wrote you is because I didn’t know where you was. Love, your dad.” It was the first message I’d ever had from my father. And it was the last. I was twenty-four years old at the time and remember staring at that birthday card for a long time, brushing my fingers over the illustration of a garden cart full of flowers. I found it touching, somehow, that he’d remembered when I was born.
He had been a troubled young soldier in 1945, stationed in California, never deployed, and after three years of a rather fragile marriage, he’d decided he didn’t want a wife and child after all and simply walked away, leaving us behind. We never saw him again.
When I was a grown woman wth a child of my own, I found my father. I’d located an old phonebook for Lemmon, South Dakota, his birthplace, and I called every listing in the book with my family name. Searching for information was much more of a challenge in those days, of course, but I did find my father’s sister. “He’s been living up there in Big Timber, Montana, working as a ranch hand, doing odd jobs for many years,“ my Auntie told me. “He never married again.” I wrote to him, and after a few weeks, I got the card in the mail
“The reason I never wrote you was because I didn’t know where you was. Love your dad.” How many times over the years had I taken that sentence apart, word by word, hoping to find something more he was trying to say, some hidden affection or explanation or apology. I never found any. I kept that card for a long time and one day just tossed it out. I could see no reason to keep it; he had no interest in seeing me. He had no excuse for not finding me — I was, after all, right where he’d left me.
I don’t forgive him for disappearing, but I don’t hate him either. He must have loved me at first. He wrote in my pink satin baby book, “Little daughter you are the cutest little girl I have ever seen or hope to see. May your life be full of happiness and may God bless you every day of your life. Always your daddy.” I have accepted now that ‘always’ is not a fixed time, and he did what he thought he had to do.
I do wonder, though, how he was able to live with himself all those years, knowing what he had done. It is beyond my comprehension. I am sad for him. How does a man get up every morning and go to bed every night burdened with such guilt? Did he even feel any guilt? What sort of rationalization does a man make when he forsakes a wife and a child, leaving them to live or die as may be? Did he ever wonder what happened to us? Did he keep a photograph of us tucked away in his sock drawer? The questions will never be answered.
My father died at the young age of fifty-seven. After he was buried and all his debts were settled, his entire remaining estate was sent to me — three hundred dollars to a daughter that he had brushed off like so much dust from his boots those many years ago. There is a certain sadness in me that will remain, but it does not and did not dampen my spirit or my ability to build a great life. ( I am my mother’s daughter.) But three hundred dollars was not what I needed.
That's a tough beginning. I'd bet there was guilt. Perhaps even punishment that he brought upon himself. He could neither face it nor forget it.
Sometimes I just have to shake my head. People can say that it has nothing to do with the child but try telling that to the child.
He missed out on so much when he ran away. But I have no sympathy for him.
You had a beautiful, supportive mother. You are rich in that regard.