Just Sharing III- "Happy Fathers Day"

Express yourself. Convey your thoughts.

Moderators: kampanaryo_spy, cordapya, pato

Post Reply
User avatar
Alone
Occasional Member
Occasional Member
Posts: 28
Joined: Sat Jun 09, 2007 3:47 am
Location: Somewhere..

Just Sharing III- "Happy Fathers Day"

Unread post by Alone »

“All parents damage their children. Sometimes it cannot be helped. Youth, like pristine glass, absorbs the prints of its handlers. Some parents’ smudge, others crack, a few shatter childhoods completely into jagged little pieces, beyond repair.” –Author Unknown

****

The hands that hold a child’s glass often commit the mistake that parents rarely recognize – the mistake of molding their children to an authoritarian replica of themselves; succumbing into a dream of reliving their blemished lives through their children; attempting to correct the errata of their past.

These hands fulfill their own dream not their child’s, leaving smudges and stains on the frail glass. That moment when my father told me, in the sweetest, nicest way… that I wasn’t good enough, I felt a crack mark on my glass. It had always been painful falling behind his expectations. And though failures make me strong, one day those little cracks will break me and I know so.

All those times I felt he wished he didn’t have me as a child made me firm yet brittle, leaving me with an unconscious fear of failure. I want him to love me. I cannot fail.

The way he constantly compares me to anyone who is better smothers me, to a point I could no longer feel myself, seeing myself only with respect to others, compared to others, giving up a part of me.

I never really had an exact thought of why I wanted to be like my father. All I knew was that I needed to comply with his standards. I grew up with the notion that the purpose of sons was to be what their fathers were, or better. I wanted to be able to do the things my father does even though the thought of it didn’t make much sense.

To a son, it doesn’t need sense. It is the unspoken agreement.
Even before he can devote himself to God or to any woman, a boy will always devote himself to his father, even foolishly, even beyond explanation.

Fathers and sons often resort to the unspoken agreement. They seem to do everything internally, unlike mothers and daughters who do girl-talks. A tap in the shoulder is often capable of making more sense than a 1000-word essay possibly will. A tap in the shoulder is capable of saying it all – approval, appreciation, concern, love.

A son’s first unspoken agreement in life would be an oath to his father telling Him “A part of me wants to, and will be like you, and I don’t need to know why.” Everyday, a son unconsciously has this thought at the back of his head as each day he spends with his father may either strengthen or weaken this vow. Nonetheless, whatever the circumstance may be, he always has this thought in his subconscious mind.

The unspoken agreement is what helps boys grow to be young men.
Young men go to war, sometimes because they need to, sometimes because they want to. Always, they feel they are supposed to.

Men by nature believe they are born with the task of complying with what society expects from them. It is a vision, American dream sort. And since their childhood, it had always been their fathers who reminded them of their obligation – to be the foundation society expects them to be, needs them to be. To live a formal fallacy!

One night, an unexpected spontaneous profound conversation with my dad came about. It suddenly made sense. It wasn’t that my father didn’t love me as much as I wish he did. It was that He had a different way of doing it. He was always pushing me to be the best I could be, sometimes I stumbled, often I didn’t.

The problem of men is that they seldom communicate. They often feel that they are “supposed to” - supposed to know, supposed understand, supposed to be capable, supposed to be able. Men think too much, assume too much, expect too much. They just don’t know it.

Parents rarely let go of their children, so children let go of them. They move on. They move away.

Having difficulty accepting the fact that their children are already grown-ups, fathers often arrive in a conflict with their sons, afraid of the concept of them losing control over their sons’ actions – losing grip of the glass.
Whenever my dad distanced himself, he took a part of me; a surge of coldness detached a part of me from my self. I couldn’t feel the same warmth I felt with my mom. I wasn’t supposed to, I think. Maybe my dad felt I wasn’t supposed to.

My dad was a great person, but wasn’t an excellent teacher. He knew me, but didn’t understand me. He was impatient. Yet, I am what I am because I wanted to be like him.

I love my dad, I just don’t show it. He knows it though, I think. Most sons don’t show it, not until after it’s too late. Sons don’t say “I love you.” to their fathers, we’re not expected to. Sadly, time will probably come when I’ll look back to the time when I could still, at least, see His love though I couldn’t feel it the way I needed to.

A father’s life is a life of sacrifice. I understand. That life ends, but its love doesn’t. It passes to the next generation, and to the next, and to the next in a cyclic process. That is why fathers want to have sons, so they could live forever, so they could be remembered through their children… and they are!

A fatherly love is never lost.

However, lost love is still love. It takes a different form, that’s all. You can’t see their smile or bring them food or tousle their hair or move them around the dance floor. But when those senses weaken, another heightens - memory. Memory becomes your partner. You nurture it. You hold it. You dance with it.

When the inevitable comes, I hope all of us have enough memories to supply that utmost fatherly love. Until then, I’ll keep on pretending. I’ll keep on living a life full of a son’s suppressed love.

******
Dude,

As I promise here it is..
I've edited and added things on it (base on the stories that you told me)
Hope this is just in time for you school paper for this coming Fathers Day..
I forgot you email addr so I post it here.
I hope you still have my email addr, send me an email once you read this.

*Alone*

P.S.
Happy fathers Day to my own Dad..
Hope to see you this weekend..
"Somethings are not meant to last. Let us leave it that way. Its better that we move on and continue our lives."

User avatar
Wena
Neophyte
Neophyte
Posts: 9
Joined: Sat Jun 16, 2007 4:52 am
Location: I travel alot..

Unread post by Wena »

I do agree with you!
can you send me the email addr for dude?
Thanks!

Post Reply