i don't know what my father sounds like when he laughs, laughs where his sides are splitting and tears are in his eyes. i only know his grin, his slight chuckle. honestly, i hardly remember his voice; something about a southern drawl gently dabbed on syllables spit out between the touch of nicotine, wrapped in paper, to his lips. i know the clothes that i wear mimic his choice in clothes, somehow. i know he will not walk me down the aisle, and this is my decision. this is my decision, and it will break my heart. it will break my heart only because it will break his, like genetics somehow link emotion across generations. i cannot let him run my life, like pretending to own a car that isn't in his name; borrowed from the person who washes it gently, details the inside, maintains its running parts.
turning children into property, it's like trying to take a house that you used to live in, years and years ago, but forgot you had the keys to. you test the locks, and when the door welcomes you in for the first steps across a threshold you call it "home" again. you forget that there is a family on the couches. a mother cleaning the kitchen. a brother fixing the shudders. the house has moved on, but cannot bear to close its door to you.
this is our relationship. this is our dynamic. it has taught me that it hurts to tell him no. it is expected for him to not care what hurts. it has taught me how to run from guilt and shame, destroying past and future in fits of self-destructive rage, just to forget the things i've done or are happening to me. it's taught me how it feels for a heart to break from forgetting pieces of someone it loves.
but this hasn't taught me how to fix it, and i don't think he knows how to, either.