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It was January of 1994 when he told me, "Son, true love, well, it's hard to come around." Or maybe he said, "come by." I can't remember exactly. Memory is foggy, age, you know. I never thought I'd ever say that. I've had a pet since I was born. Not the same one, they always end up dying. I haven't gone a year without one close by me. Before bed, I pucker my lips and pretend to kiss twice behind both ears while whispering to them, "Goodnight." Then, I lightly scratch their sanctum, be it cage or kennel, so they know I am no ghost; I am truly there. Dog, cat, rat, it doesn't matter really; they all just blankly stare back and continue with their nightly business. "If you love something, it can never leave. Only hate can drive others away, and that, that's called, 'self-hate.'" Then he laughed, he laughed out with stretched cheeks and gold-capped teeth and that "eyeglasses-off" look as if the world was deaf, blind, and dumb. His white collar crisp, stiff with starch. That morning was ours. Within earshot, the cat was mewing, awaiting our kitchen entry where, in the white-walled corner, sat his bowl, staring at the ceiling, brown, dry, stale. That morning always comes back to me like a child returning from school. Homework on the table and a snack to eat just before rushing out to meet up with the neighborhood kids for a game of football down the road. They've surely had talks like ours, Dad. They've rubbed noses and brushed pink cheeks of late lovers, flashed back to mother and wrestling with brother. Those important conversations that only return with age, we all remember them.
0
Feb 8, 2013
Feb 8, 2013 at 9:23 PM UTC
A Father-Son Talk
It was January of 1994 when he told me, "Son, true love, well, it's hard to come around." Or maybe he said, "come by." I can't remember exactly. Memory is foggy, age, you know. I never thought I'd ever say that. I've had a pet since I was born. Not the same one, they always end up dying. I haven't gone a year without one close by me. Before bed, I pucker my lips and pretend to kiss twice behind both ears while whispering to them, "Goodnight." Then, I lightly scratch their sanctum, be it cage or kennel, so they know I am no ghost; I am truly there. Dog, cat, rat, it doesn't matter really; they all just blankly stare back and continue with their nightly business. "If you love something, it can never leave. Only hate can drive others away, and that, that's called, 'self-hate.'" Then he laughed, he laughed out with stretched cheeks and gold-capped teeth and that "eyeglasses-off" look as if the world was deaf, blind, and dumb. His white collar crisp, stiff with starch. That morning was ours. Within earshot, the cat was mewing, awaiting our kitchen entry where, in the white-walled corner, sat his bowl, staring at the ceiling, brown, dry, stale. That morning always comes back to me like a child returning from school. Homework on the table and a snack to eat just before rushing out to meet up with the neighborhood kids for a game of football down the road. They've surely had talks like ours, Dad. They've rubbed noses and brushed pink cheeks of late lovers, flashed back to mother and wrestling with brother. Those important conversations that only return with age, we all remember them.
joseph-valle
Written by
American
Feb 8, 2013
Feb 8, 2013 at 9:23 PM UTC
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