I walked away as soon as I saw the line in the distance.
The line that I will never cross.
I walked away and felt my fathers fist across my face.
I spared my precious boy the terror of being beaten by the man he wants to grow up and be just like.
I walked away when I saw the tears well up in his innocent eyes and the confusion contorting his face, when I heard some frustrated father misdirecting his own anger and confusion towards an undeserving child and realized the ******* father was me.
I heard my father screaming at his woman about having a kid who would do "whatever the **** I tell him to if you hit him hard enough" and realizing that kid was me. I remember a part of me withered when I heard this.
He was right. My father conditioned me to take a beating. He taught me how to shut the **** up and do what the **** I am told. He taught me not to question his orders, even when I knew they were wrong. He taught me obedience by beating me. He taught me submission by leaving me no other choice.
He taught me how to be broken.
I learned my lessons well. I let people push me around because that was my place. I let people get over on me because I didn't want to confront them. I lost my girls to other guys because I was weak and scared. I got passed up for promotions because I was hesitant and indecisive.
How do you forgive someone for conditioning you to be a failure?
How do I reconcile loving my father for the frail human that he is and hating him for the vile and abusive monster that he was?
When I saw the look on my sons face I wondered briefly if that was how I used to look when my father was berating me.
Right before fist hit face.
How the **** could he hit me with that look of fear and confusion and conflicting feelings on my face that must have registered somewhere in his drunken mind.
I can't help but think it must have been devastating for him, somehow, someway.
He stopped apologizing for the beatings and I stopped thinking I didn't deserve them.
All of these thoughts and feelings passed through my brain in a split second and I turned away from my son.
My precious son.
My reason for existing.
My everything.
I turned away from his tear stained face and sat down to cry for a while myself.
I knew that I had caused some damage. I thought back to all those times I sat crying in my room as a kid and wondered what would have made me feel better at the time, besides the obvious of not just having my *** kicked by a grown man.
42 years of gnawing pain and frustration and fear and silence and tears and rage and crushing loneliness and shame
and fear and fear and fear
walked up the steps to where a ******* 12 year old boy sat alone.
42 years of breaking the cycles of abuse and addiction walked up the stairs and spent the next hour healing what I had damaged in two minutes.
Later that night, as I lay in bed questioning every ******* decision I have ever made, again, I heard some sort of noise that startled me.
I leaped out of bed and took a quick route through the place to see what the noise was. I never did find out what caused it but I called up to the boy quietly and asked if he heard it. It appears he had been awake as well and had been rattling around in his own thoughts.
My boy had been thinking about death.
He was realizing the eventual imminence of our own mortality and the weight of that thought was crushing. I was there for him, though. I was able to put his mind at ease. We talked of death, and life, and God, and philosophy and we had a wonderful conversation together sitting in his darkened room.