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Parenting with PACEs. PACEs science & stories. Trauma-informed change.

A Relative Stranger (www.lilacsinoctober.wordpress.com)

 

Arwen Faulkner wrote this stunning piece about her father, ACEs, their relationships and his death. Like life, it's complex, painful and beautiful all at the same time.

What I know about my father could fit on a grain of sand. He wore Drakkar Noir cologne, rode a Harley Davidson, and loved Jimi Hendrix. And he was an addict with a brilliant mind who struggled most of his life to shake the monkey off his back, until one day, that nasty monkey killed him. A few other things I wish I didn’t know: he physically assaulted my mom before she left him, beat a murder rap in the 1970’s, and ran a prostitution ring in the 1980’s.

I cringed as the funeral home minister began his eulogy. “Rick was a loving father and grandfather…”

Is he kidding?

“…who was well-respected and loved by his community. He will be deeply missed.”

I can’t listen to this.

I looked over the gaunt faces in the crowd, and tried to meet the haunted stares of my father’s friends—the people he’d given his time and energy to, the ones he’d chosen over me. I wanted to be angry, furious. But instead, I felt intensely sad. Not for me, but for all of them, and for the people who loved them. In the downcast, empty eyes of my father’s comrades, I saw his shame and fear. Finally, I was able to acknowledge the oceans of guilt and self-loathing that had stood between my father and the life he could’ve lived. Between us. I realized then that Dad hadn’t chosen to leave—addiction had stolen him away.

That changed everything. Full essay.

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Thanks Christine

 For letting me know that I am not alone. Also thanks for VALIDATING MY EXPERIENCE of Sharing with you ladies. Its really is a healing experience to be validated by another human being. My mother was a battering-woman and my father just emotionally neglected me.

Thanks

Rick

Dear Rick:

So many lives are destroyed by addiction and it's sad that so many die of this disease like Arwen's Dad, yours and mine. There's so much grief, huh? For what we did know or didn't know, for who we did know or didn't know and for what was as well as what wasn't and all the questions.... what might have been if....

Isn't it amazing to find some compassion in epigenetics or at least understanding? I'm sorry you didn't have the father you needed and were hurt as a child.

Thanks for braving some of your feelings and story!
Cissy

Hello Christine

   Thanks for SHARING THE NASTY TRUTH about the "Disease of addiction" when a loved one is Playing the games addicts/alcoholics play, The game of Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde.....The Hidden Mr. or Mrs Hyde usually takes them out. Unfortunately My biological father played so long that Mr. Hyde took over Dr Jekyll and he lost the power of "Conscious choice" and his dark side killed him. The disease kept progressing and "Spirit killing behaviors" ended his life in 2005. His own mind destroyed him.  Sadly I have so disassociated from  that death that I am still trying to grieve that loss of a father myself. I had realized I didn't ever feel like I connected to him on any level due to his emotional neglect of me and him spending hours at his business. He seem to avoid me and my younger brothers by being a workaholic.  I learned he was a "Untreated adult child" who had major trauma issues with his own biological father. Now I am learning about the Epigenetic legacy of trauma and how that get pass down through the male side of the human species. WOW... What a legacy...thanks for listening to me and ALLOWING me to share my  painful story.

Rick

 

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