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When you were eleven and shy and shuffled your feet from classroom to classroom in that middle school, eyes downcast, avoiding bullies like a midge fly zipping away from the hungry maws of rainbow trout lurking in a mountain stream, your father sat you down at the dinner table on a cold Monday night, over a steaming plate of meatloaf and a baked potato and some type of microwaved canned vegetable (the same meal that he served every Monday night), and he lectured you about the importance of direct eye contact, always making direct eye contact, while he held the fork in his left hand and pointed it at you, its tines coated in starches and ketchup, like he was jamming his index finger straight into your forehead. “Never look away when someone is staring at you,” he said. “It shows that you are afraid. It shows that you are weaker than they are.” Then, to make his point, he held his eye contact—an aggressive, primal stare— with you, an introverted child, for as long as he could, knowing that it would hurt you, that it would make you wince and cringe, but hoping that it would strengthen you, solidify some resolve deep within you, foster the germination of some thorny plant there beneath your sternum, which over time would grow into a gnarled cuirass designed to protect you against the world and make you into a Man—a true Man’s Man, the kind of Man who uses his hairy knuckles to smash his problems—the kind of Man who eats red meat and drives a truck, and never backs down from a ******* contest, even with an introverted eleven-year-old boy, and so on, and so forth. Of course, no such hardness ever germinated within you, and whatever bond it was that existed between you and your father there beneath your sternum simply frayed in that moment—a sacred rope spanning generations suddenly transmuted into dust. And of course you looked away ashamed, and your father was ashamed, too, not for his own abhorrent behavior, but because you were his child. But he was also proud of himself in that moment for showing what a Man he was now, for finally having proved his own father, your grandfather, wrong, even after all of those years had passed.
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Jan 2, 2020
Jan 2, 2020 at 4:36 PM UTC
Your Father
When you were eleven and shy and shuffled your feet from classroom to classroom in that middle school, eyes downcast, avoiding bullies like a midge fly zipping away from the hungry maws of rainbow trout lurking in a mountain stream, your father sat you down at the dinner table on a cold Monday night, over a steaming plate of meatloaf and a baked potato and some type of microwaved canned vegetable (the same meal that he served every Monday night), and he lectured you about the importance of direct eye contact, always making direct eye contact, while he held the fork in his left hand and pointed it at you, its tines coated in starches and ketchup, like he was jamming his index finger straight into your forehead. “Never look away when someone is staring at you,” he said. “It shows that you are afraid. It shows that you are weaker than they are.” Then, to make his point, he held his eye contact—an aggressive, primal stare— with you, an introverted child, for as long as he could, knowing that it would hurt you, that it would make you wince and cringe, but hoping that it would strengthen you, solidify some resolve deep within you, foster the germination of some thorny plant there beneath your sternum, which over time would grow into a gnarled cuirass designed to protect you against the world and make you into a Man—a true Man’s Man, the kind of Man who uses his hairy knuckles to smash his problems—the kind of Man who eats red meat and drives a truck, and never backs down from a ******* contest, even with an introverted eleven-year-old boy, and so on, and so forth. Of course, no such hardness ever germinated within you, and whatever bond it was that existed between you and your father there beneath your sternum simply frayed in that moment—a sacred rope spanning generations suddenly transmuted into dust. And of course you looked away ashamed, and your father was ashamed, too, not for his own abhorrent behavior, but because you were his child. But he was also proud of himself in that moment for showing what a Man he was now, for finally having proved his own father, your grandfather, wrong, even after all of those years had passed.
Ira-Desmond
Written by
42/M/American
Jan 2, 2020
Jan 2, 2020 at 4:36 PM UTC
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