To My Father (1924-2018)

The Hot Goddess is traveling and offline through June. This is a re-post from 2021 in honor of Father’s Day this Sunday in the United States. Happy Father’s Day to fathers and father figures everywhere.



Dear Dad,

It’s been three years since you died, and Father’s Day still seems weird. It was a death you wished for – frequently and vocally – for years prior. After the Alzheimer’s diagnosis, and then the inoperable blood clot in your brain, and the prostate cancer that spread to your spine and bones. It was a death I was grateful for yet still mourn. A death I assisted with morphine from the “comfort care” package delivered to the house by the hospice team.

The last year of your life was everything you’d always said you never wanted. Bedridden, helpless, incapacitated, in certain and relentless pain, though you never, ever complained. Not once. Remarkable, really. Only an occasional wince, witnessed by keen and searching eyes, would belie your constant assertion, “I’ve never felt pain in my life.”

You were 90 when we took this photo together on the 4th of July, 2014.

This is an unbelievable statement. Impossible, especially given your many ailments, hospitalizations, and surgeries. Heart attacks, brain hemorrhage, triple bypass surgery, two broken jaws from a fall, cancer…so many pain-causing events. And yet: “I’ve never felt pain in my life.”

There was also your harsh history growing up in the brutal Jim Crow south during America’s ugly 1920s. The grandson of a man who’d been born a slave. The son and youngest of 13 children of a father you watched die at home of a stroke in his 50s because the nearest hospital didn’t accept Black patients. The teenager, drafted into the Navy during World War II, who was denied a public high school education and access to the public library by Jim Crow laws, yet who went on to use the GI Bill to attend the University of Michigan, receiving bachelor’s and master’s degrees in industrial and mechanical engineering.

You told us how the dean at the time wrote you he was accepting you “against my better judgment,” but there was no place for you until second semester. So you applied to and were accepted by the University of Nebraska for the first semester. Nebraska. From Montgomery, Alabama. I keep imagining you saying, “OK, bitches. I’m goin’ to Nebraska, and then I’m comin’ to Michigan. You’re not gonna stop me so don’t even try. I got this!” Of course, you would NEVER speak in this way, but thinking about it makes me smile. Oh how I wish you could see the glowing letter the University of Michigan sent to Mom after you died. Yeah. Now they know. Best judgment ever.

I wonder what that dean thought when you got the highest score in your class on the engineering certification exam. I wonder what the recruiter from The Standard Oil Co. thought after he left you waiting all day in the interview anteroom on campus, thinking that the high-scoring candidate he wanted to interview couldn’t possibly be the Black man he’d left sitting there all day. Little did he know he’d been ignoring the man who’d soon become the first Black engineer hired to work on the executive floor of Standard Oil’s world headquarters building in downtown Cleveland.

If you ever did feel pain you didn’t show or express it. You also didn’t show or express pride, thinking hubris was an ignorant person’s folly. And you didn’t really show or express love – at least not the way we saw it on TV or in the movies. But we knew you loved us. “You’re a good dad, in your own way,” your only son, my younger brother, once told you.

We were loved.

Living with you was not always easy. Sometimes it was scary. You were a refined, brilliant, and quiet man who didn’t swear and rarely drank. Your professorial demeanor made the sudden, violent rages over minuscule infractions all the more incongruous. Anything was fair game as a weapon of punishment. The buckle end of a belt. The wooden leg of a smashed chair. A record album. An ax. I wonder: Did you feel pain then? Was that what you were expressing?

Was it the swallowed rage of decades of discrimination and denied dignity that erupted at home, in the only place it could back then? Or, were the violent outbursts related to the same cerebral issues that led to a ruptured blood vessel in your brain in your 50s, and minor mini-strokes over the decades that followed?

How about those human people,” you always said, calm and restrained in the face of bad behavior by strangers. A true and wise acknowledgment of human weakness and complexity. I’ve come to appreciate this sentiment even more in my 60s. People are complicated. Families are complicated. Love is complicated. As your children grew into adults and had children of their own, we came to understand this well.

All three of your children had become parents by 2008.

I understand very well that you gave your all to everything you did, without complaint or excuse. You gave your all to being our father and Mom’s husband. You mellowed with age and became a grandfather who was the light of my only child’s life. You two had a special, one-of-a-kind relationship and understanding. Watching him with you created some of my most treasured memories, and you’ve given him a lifetime of beloved memories and experiences he will never forget. At 27, his eyes still light up when he talks about “Grandpa.” I am so grateful to you for that. I wish I’d remembered to tell you.

I don’t do the mushy, emotional stuff very well. Perhaps I get that from you? Mom used to call me “Little Robert.” I am your first-born. I am my father’s daughter. As your time here was coming to an end, I thanked you for all you did for me. I told you that you were a good father, and recounted my happy memories. Did you believe me? Did you hear me? Did you know you are my hero, even though I didn’t tell you?

Did you know I’d forgiven you?

Did you forgive me?

I’m so sorry I fell asleep. I’d been by your side in a chair next to the hospital bed in the living room for two days and two nights. I couldn’t have been asleep for more than mere minutes when I awoke with a start to quiet. It took me a second to register what was different. Then I heard the silence in the room, absent the jarring death rattle of your breathing. It was dark and I was afraid to turn on the light, not wanting to see what I knew was there. Not wanting to confirm death. Did you know you weren’t alone? Did you call out? Were you afraid? Did you know you were dying? Did you feel pain then, as you took your last breath?

It’s been three years and I’ve still not resolved these questions for myself. How could I have fallen asleep? I have not forgiven myself yet. Were you embarrassed or disappointed by my show of emotion when those men callously zipped you into the black body bag right there in the living room? None of us will ever get that image out of our minds. I’m sorry if I let you down.

I wonder if you’d be proud of me now. You would be mortified by this blog, I know, and you’d be disgusted by the whole concept of Instagram. Hubris on steroids. But… I still have the baby grand piano you helped me pick out years ago. I kept it when I purged my belongings two years ago. The appreciation of classical music you instilled since childhood has lasted, even if my seven years of classical piano lessons have not. You placed high value on learning and curiosity and exploration. “For the sake of science,” you’d always say. I’m now learning about how bourbon whiskey is made“for the sake of science.”  I think you’d get a kick out of that.

I’m the only person in the family who is on her own financially – still – yet I managed to retire two years ago, following your rules for saving, financial investing, and frugal living. I think you would be proud of that. I traveled around the world by myself for nearly two-and-a-half months, wearing the jacket I bought you when you were walking every day. The jacket you wore once and then declared it “too noisy” when you moved. I took that jacket with me and made noise all around the world. Did you hear me?

Your “noisy” jacket in Kyoto, Japan

Do you know that every big decision I make I ask myself what you would do…what you would say? Do you know your greatest, most profound gift to me is your lifelong modeling of resilience, grit, and personal responsibility in the face of adversity?

I started this letter to you with something else in mind, but this is where it’s taken me. It’s not enough. It will never be enough. I can’t express it well enough. I am my father’s daughter, after all.

I love you, Dad. I know you loved me. Thank you for everything…there’s so much. Your legacy is lasting.

I miss you.

Love,

Natalie


Happy Father’s Day

Happy Juneteenth



Thank you for reading! ❤️ The Hot Goddess will return with original content June 30.

Father and daughter. 
Dad would be 100 this year.

All images are my own.

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13 comments

  1. What a wonderful account of your father’s life! I am sure that he was very proud of you and is smiling now. As parents we are pleased with our children no matter what happens.

    This time of the year is tough since my father died 29 years ago. Reading your blog allowed me to recall the good days with my father. Thanks for sharing and inspiring others to reflect as well.

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  2. What a beautiful tribute Natalie. It made me cry because it hit close to home with my dad being the same way. He was a very serious non-emotional guy and we had a tough and conflicting upbringing with him in regards to the same violent rage he inflicted on us, but being a Chinese immigrant himself, I’m sure he dealt with a lot of racial issues as well. He passed away in ’99 from cancer but I think of him everyday. I’ve been meaning to write a similar letter which I need to do. It wasn’t easy living with him but I did still love him and he loved us in his own way. I’m the first born and definitely my father’s daughter just like you. Your father sounds like such a remarkable man. The things he went though in his life, WOW!

    I’m definitely sure your father is very proud of you and if you fell asleep, it was meant to be. Things happen for a reason so you shouldn’t beat yourself up about it. I’m sure he was OK with it. Maybe he didn’t want you to watch him pass. He knows you were there though and that was probably enough for him. You’ll never know but either way it’s hard and I was there when my dad passed as well and I was so young. It was such a difficult time. I also watched my step-dad pass years later in 2016 also from cancer and it’s never easy to witness. But with my biological dad, there were things I wish I could tell him now as an adult. I feel like he would of mellowed out like your dad if he were still alive today, but I truly feel he’s been with me and I’m sure your dad will be too, watching you travel, protecting you and living your beautiful life. He’s definitely smiling down at you from up above and I’m 100% sure he heard your noisy jacket! 🙂 Big hugs XO

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  3. What a loving and powerful tribute to your father, Natalie. This is worth reposting every year; there are so many lessons for us to be reminded of. Thank you for sharing those lessons through your father’s history

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  4. Very sweet thought about your dad. I’m sure it meant a lot to him that you thought so highly of him. I also traveled down that road watching my mom sink further and further into dementia to the point that she was mixing me up with my dad. Despite losing her cognitive abilities, she always retained her wonderfully kind nature. To this day, I say she was the best person I ever knew.

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  5. What a beautiful tribute to your father. I am sure he is very proud of you, Natalie. Thank you for sharing; you have a wonderful way with words!

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  6. Powerful Father’s Day thoughts. A good friend’s mother passed away the three minutes the friend went to the washroom. Sometimes people only feel permission to leave at that point without their loved one watching, my friend explained to me. But I can’t say how I would feel since I haven’t experienced it yet. What an amazing father. May his memory be a blessing.

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