A picture is worth thousands and thousands and thousands of dollars in therapy
There was a time in my life when I was certain I was broken in matters of the heart. I thought I could only love one person at a time, that anger ruled, spite filled in the empty spaces, grudges were permanent and forgiveness impossible.
I happen to come from some seriously mean stock. And while there are tales of physical brutality and general badness on my mother’s side a few generations back, my father’s emotional cruelty makes Great Great Gramma Wein look like Glenda the Good Witch. I have imagined before that the other half of my DNA simmered in a rusty cauldron of hot bubbling viciousness, a sour olive-drab ooze that later thickened as it cooled to 98.6-degrees and was now coursing through my veins. It’s part of the reason, when dealing with infertility, that I opted to skip IVF, the best decision I ever made. I reasoned that there was a reason I wasn’t getting pregnant and that reason was an end to my genetic line.
Over the holidays, The Brother I Still Speak To informed me that his father (our father) had recently been diagnosed with Alzheimers. We were having lunch in a large booth at a pub—this brother and me, The Gaydi Project, Sam, Ruby and my brother’s girlfriend—when I just happened to ask the right question, unknowingly offering up the elusive-and-agonized-over appropriate moment my brother had been hoping to find since I’d arrived on Christmas day.
I haven’t had a relationship with my father for more than 25 years but The Brother I Still Speak To and The Brother I No Longer Speak To have each managed to maintain some sort of—what should I call it?—arrangement? with this father person and that arrangement goes something like this: They love him, he doesn’t love them back and they deal with this rejection the best they can. I, on the other hand, walked away early, pony tail swinging, tears flowing and though it took many, many years, I made my peace.
It is, I think, our individual approaches to the same rejection that have defined my relationship with each of them. It’s all very complicated and I could fill every single page of the Internet (and then three leather-bound journals for the appendix) trying to explain the awry-ness of my family. But the fact is that The Brother I Still Speak To doesn’t want to hurt me and I don’t want to hurt him. In a largely unspoken agreement, we respect that each of us has chosen a different path as it pertains to our father and we’re careful not to bruise one another over it. So it makes sense that he was nervous to drop it while it was hot.
I think he was worried I’d freak out, rejoice, fly off the handle, go into a rage, crumble into tears, jump up and down with glee…I really have no idea quite what he thought my response would be. But it was certainly something un-good because he was a bit sheepish and gently awkward about the telling. He may have even winced, prepared for me to throw my drink in his face, which I would never do because if ever I needed a stiff one, it was at that moment. Jamison on the rocks has never tasted so good.
There we were, sitting at this table with the big huge elephant on it and what do you know but my eyes filled-up with a tear or two. To be clear, my eyeballs weren’t brimming over; there was no spillage. But my very first reaction was one of sadness for this mean mo-fo who fathered me because, I don’t really care who you are or what dastardly things you’ve done with your life, Alzheimers is no pleasant ending. I wouldn’t wish it on anyone: Not my worst enemy, not Dick Cheney or Robert Mugabe, not even my father. Admittedly, I had a number of other far less generous thoughts immediately following the blip of compassion. Some of them are very cruel but I’m going to list them anyway because they are what they are and I’m nothing if not honest. Here they are in order of how they appeared in my invisible thought bubble:
1. Sadness/pity (already said this one but I wanted to keep the list in appropriate numerical order).
2. Couldn’t have happened to a nicer guy.
3. Thank God my mother isn’t married to him anymore…I’d hate for her to have to wipe his ass.
4. Alzheimers? That’s too easy! He deserves to be aware of his slow decline and eventual demise.
5. I mean, how about something painful like anal cancer coupled with severe sinusitis, ingrown toenails, erectile dysfunction and the clear realization that he’s dying surrounded by little more than feral cats?
6. Does this mean I have a greater likelihood of getting the disease?
7. That asshat gives me all the bad shit.
8. The ultimate control freak losing all control? Dude. Karma is no joke.
I’m not exactly proud of numbers 2 through 5, and number 7 is a toss-up (thanks to this man, I have a greater chance of dropping dead from a chunk of loosened plaque than I do of making it to the age of senility). But as I sat across from my brother and my mother a little dumbfounded by the flow of information, it was number 1 that reassured me. My unflinching first reaction let me know that I’m not defective. My heart is working as it should. Anger and spite are not permanent residents there. Sure, grudges come and then I let them go. Forgiveness is being cultivated. It’s a work in progress and it’s fun to joke—even okay to do so—but mostly, I knew right then exactly how far I’d come in healing old wounds.
That night and the next, I stayed up late with my mother listening to stories about her life, her marriage to my father, their love and the end of it, the events that lead to their separation and events that transpired after. Some stories were familiar but others I hadn’t heard before. His vulnerability and aging was, for my mother, a spotlight on how quickly time has passed and a reminder of what matters in life. “Wanna take another walk down bitter memory lane?” she asked me with a smirk before continuing. And so we walked.
Just before she put the family I’ve built in a cab for the airport, she dug out a drawing of the family she’d built, made by The Brother I No Longer Speak To—the middle child—when he was five, three years before my father left. It’s compelling how accurate a story he told at such a young age.
That right there is a pending American tragedy. It’s an understatement to say that the progress I’ve made has not also been made by the artist. There’s plenty more to say. But I’ll leave it at that for right now, I think.

Wow. I won’t say this is a wonderful piece – “wonderful” is a bit too cheery this time around – but it’s certainly one of your better ones. Jaggedly honest, I’d say and moving because of it.
For what it’s worth, as I was reading and that drawing scrolled into view, I couldn’t help but glance ahead and look at it before reading your description of who drew it, and when. My reaction:
1. “Oh, look at the cute drawing from Ruby”
2. “Wait a minute… that’s bizarre”
3. “There here’s no WAY that’s something Ruby drew”
Take comfort in knowing that, at least from this stranger’s point of view, a thousand miles away, you are doing wonderful things. While karma may be a bitch at times, it’s also a two way street. Sure seems like you’re on the right side of it.
Be well.
I’m speechless, thank you for sharing.
I linked this post to The Sister I Still Speak To and I wrote “it doesn’t make me feel better, but it certainly makes me feel normal (?)”
I guess more families are alike than we realize.
Wow. Thanks for writing this. I was 15 when I ended a fight with my father by saying, “I can’t do this anymore. I can be civil, but don’t ever mistake me being civil for me loving you.” Nine years later and the relationship is non-existent. He’s been sick, and an old family friend of his wrote a letter to my siblings imploring them to force him to a doctor’s office. Notably the letter was not addressed to me. I will never know if it is because they have mutually disowned me or respect my decision or know that I was too far away to help (CA to PA). He hasn’t died yet, but the question now is whether to take the valuable vacation time and expensive flight to the funeral, for the sake of my siblings (or myself?).
Again, thank you.
It’s amazing how chapters that you didn’t think could squeeze any more from you, still have their ways. I think it shows what a great person you are that your first and strongest reaction was compassion. All of your others are totally understandable too. You should be very proud of the family you’ve created for the three of you. It’s major ingredient is love and you can already tell from the awesome little person you’re raising that you’re steering clear of repeating any bad family history. I’m sorry you had to hear that news.
I incredibly touched by this piece. I love you, dearest fgd. xoxo
Your title said it all. That picture was incredible.
There’s nothing I can say that hasn’t already been said, but thank you for articulating that some dads were mean mo-fo’s and that we don’t have to get all misty about them. Sometimes all that remains is pity. I totally hear you on that one.
People with Alzhiemer’s are usually aware of the their decline, at least in the early stages. I’ve heard that life keeps teaching us lessons that we refuse to learn. That’s certainly been true for both my mother and me as she’s dealt with it. My thoughts and best wishes go out to you as you come to terms with the news. And be sure to keep an eye on that high blood pressure – it can be a significant contributing factor to the onset of the illness.
@Robert, Nancy, Melissa, Christine, Bonnie and Mary: Thank you so much for reading and commenting.
@Karla: Thank you, as well. I appreciate your words but can’t help but think that perhaps my point was missed. I don’t have anything to come to terms with here. As I said, I’ve already made my peace with things as they are and that’s where this ends. As for my father’s illness, it’s not my problem since I do not have a relationship with him. My only issue is being a bit concerned that I may be predisposed to the disease now that my father’s been diagnosed and that I have astronomical cholesterol levels (fortunately for me, the bp is great!).
I am sorry to hear your mother is grappling with Alzheimers and wish you both well.
Beautifully written.
Thank you, I can relate, though not articulate what you have here. Thak you for a little piece of healing.
I can relate, and, as always, I love how you speak of these things.
Your feelings are precisely that: YOUR FEELINGS. There’s no right or wrong. No reason for guilt or apology. Why is it that it’s the family members (usually children) who are wronged by others who end up feeling as though they OWE the perpetrator their love, their forgiveness…not to mention feeling as though it’s expected of them to make the first concilatory gesture. When all the while the perpetrator extends no hand of apology or contrition? I admire your honesty more than you know.