No child deserves to be treated the way the man who was my father treated me.

Father’s Day is tough for me. I don’t have a dad, because the man who was my father made a choice, when I was a child, to be my bully, instead.


For my entire life, this man was implacable, inscrutable, and entirely unwilling to have any kind of relationship with me … yet he still felt entitled to my adoration an attention. Every day was a new puzzle to be solved, a new set of circumstances I had to figure out, so I could somehow evade his wrath and his cruelty.


In short, the man who was my father is an awful, selfish, cruel, racist, narcissist, and he made a choice to withhold his love and affection from me. Instead, he poured his rage, his shame, his scorn, and his cruelty into me. In my dysfunctional family, he made me the Scapegoat, and my mother went along with it.


I didn’t deserve it. No child deserves to be treated the way the man who was my father treated me. While he was bullying me, humiliating me, making me feel small and unworthy, my mother was enabling and protecting him.


And every Father’s Day, I was expected to worship and laud and celebrate that man, who may have contributed DNA to my existence, but is in no way, at all, my dad. I don’t have a dad, and I never did. I had a bully. Now, I have an endless black void where a father’s love should be, and it hurts every day. That man could have built a relationship with me, could have been a father to me, could have worked to build the same relationship with me that I’ve built with my sons, but he chose to bully me, and he invested a LOT of time and energy making sure I knew how contemptuous he was of me, and everything I did. (He didn’t have any compunctions about spending all of the money I earned when my parents put me to work against my wishes, but that’s a whole other thing. I’ve been able to earn more money; he’s the only person on this planet who could have been my dad).


So today is hard for me. I see pretty much everyone I know celebrating their awesome dads, who loved them unconditionally, the way a child deserves to be loved. I see them sharing memories of time spent with their dad, which I never got, because the man who was my father never made the effort. I’m doing my best to focus on how happy my friends are, and how lucky their children are, but it’s really hard for me to do that without feeling the massive black void where my father’s love and affection should be.


I want today to be a reminder of all the joy my own kids have brought me. I want to celebrate my own existence as a dad, to stand up and say that I did the work, I broke the cycle. I am not the selfish bully I had the misfortune of being born to. I’m a good man, and a good father. I love my sons, and we have a close and loving relationship. We don’t need a Hallmark holiday to celebrate and acknowledge the love we share, and my wife and kids know what a bastard my father was, so they’ve never imposed a celebration on me. But it still feels good when my boys call me their dad, and it still feels good when they tell me they love me. Being their dad is such a privilege, and I choose, every day, to be grateful for it.


Today, I’m going to make a deliberate choice to focus on my own children, my own experiences being the dad I never had, and I’m going to give a very special shoutout to my fellow children of bastards, who have the same complicated relationship with fatherhood that I have. This is a tough day for us, and if you grok what I’m saying, I’m so sorry. I see you, and I know.




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Published on June 21, 2020 10:56
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message 1: by jboyg (new)

jboyg Wil, a harrowing story, dude sounds like a complete and total prick. Glad to hear you managed to crawl out from that shithole and stand in the light. Happy Fathers Day.
Jimmer


message 2: by Peter (new)

Peter Loftus Thanks for sharing. My dad was an abusive prick too so I feel your pain. Take care :)


message 3: by Daisy (new)

Daisy Gijbels Sad to hear what you went through! Like you said, no one should have to experience that. But maybe you should celebrate father's day, cause you are a father to be celebrated. Maybe you can find your own father's day with your family, because you not repeating the behavior of your father is really worth celebrating and being proud of. Happy you-are-a-great-father-'s day !


message 4: by Ghengis (new)

Ghengis Well said. I think there are many people who suffer in silence every father's (and mother's) day as their own childhood exeperience left them with nothing to celebrate. Instead they mourn the absence of a love they deserved. Your parents sound like a classic narcissist and co-dependent combination. I can recommend - if you haven't already read it - "Healing the shame that binds you" by John Bradshaw - an oldie but a classic.
It still amazes me how often I am critized by ignorant people for not trying to repair the relationship with my father. Obviously there exists strong cultural pressures to " honour thy father and mother" apparently unconditionally. However such unconditional love is predicated on the assumtion that we received unconditional love as children.
Congratulations on breaking the cycle; it's hard.


message 5: by Doug (new)

Doug  Griffin Wow. A poignant reminder! Thanks! Valentines Day, Mothers Day, Fathers Day. Days that the greeting card industry and retailers hang over our heads as a way to prove our love to all in our fairy-tale family while they rake in the cash. I'd love to do away with them all and simply allow everyone to love and appreciate those who are in their circle of love. We can't change the parents that gave birth to us, but as a gay man, I've learned that my chosen family - those I choose to allow into my circle - are what has true value. I'm glad you have that in your children and your own chosen family.


message 6: by Tori (new)

Tori This spoke to me. I detest Father's Day even though my husband is a wonderful father to our 2 children. I just can't bring myself to say anything positive to my own dad on F day.


message 7: by Jemppu (new)

Jemppu So sorry, Wil.

This is actually close to what Mother's days are for me; with someone who's chosen to be emotionally distant, made sure we grew up knowing they are not available and shoved on our existence the blame of every wrong they ever felt done to them, choosing to be just as cold and despising towards their kid(s) as what they've felt hurt by themself.

It is their shame, and their failing, for continuing the circle of hurt. I hope you'll instead dedicate the day - and every day - to celebrate your own fatherhood; your braveness to recognize the scars such behavior leaves, and your will to make sure the next generation doesn't grow up carrying any of that same pain.

I'm gladdened you grew up aware, and willing to heal, despite those before you, who refused such growth.

Happy day as a father <3


message 8: by Fran (new)

Fran I understand. My mother tortured me, too. But I actually felt sorry for her in my later life. I think some terrible thing in her forced her to do these things. I am fine now, I hope you are (or will be), too.


message 9: by Ruth (new)

Ruth I didn't have a Dad because he chose to not really have a relationship with any of us. My parents got divorced when I was 8 and he moved to CA a few years later. I would see him once every 3 yrs or so. What I did have was a smart, funny, fierce mother. She is now in a nursing home suffering from dementia but I still see glimpses of the woman who raised us and loved us unconditionally. I have been blessed that she is our mother. I could not have gotten a better one if I picked her out myself. When the sperm donor died I shed hardly a single tear, we had become strangers to one another.
Concentrate on your children and being a great Dad to them. I am sorry for all the things you went through as a child. All children deserve to be loved and feel safe. Sadly, that is not the case for far too many children.


message 10: by Anne (new)

Anne S So sorry to hear about your father Will. It appears that you have been a good dad to your children and perhaps that will help you "father" yourself. I do not know his background and do not know if you are able to forgive him but for your sake I hope at some time you will be able to. Be good to yourself because you have overcome many things to be the best dad you could! Happy (belated) Father's Day.


message 11: by Dave (new)

Dave I feel your pain dude ...
I have the same story, except substitute “father” with “mother”. Kind of makes the story even a little more disturbing ...

On a lighter note, keep up the great work, I’m a big fan. Thanks for everything ...


message 12: by Claudia (new)

Claudia You broke the cycle! It took a lot of courage and hard work to become the dad you didn’t have but you did it. To you and all cycle breakers, thank you!


message 13: by Ann (new)

Ann Nowaczyk I understand! I'm so very sorry that you had to endure that kind of treatment. There are some who do not deserve to be and should not be parents. You deserve all of the love and happiness you receive from your children and wife. I'm so glad you were able to see and recognize there was a cycle to break. Much love and happiness to you!


message 14: by Michelle (new)

Michelle I'm so glad you were able to break the chain Wil. I have friends who work in law enforcement and they see this chain go from father to child and down and it's heartbreaking. My dad just leaves. He left to another state when I was 14 and did the same thing to my half sister when she was even younger. It took him until he got into his 60s to realize what responsibility was. I chose to realize that, although it sucked to lose the person I looked up to in life, I could make my own way without him. Other people's problems and issues are not going to affect my life. I hope your father's day was wonderful with your children.


message 15: by Deby (new)

Deby Earl For me it was my mother. At almost 65 yrs old it still haunts me. I too broke that cycle. But, im left with panic disorder, PTSD, chronic depression and DID. My only glory is raising a marvelous daughter who has become a great mother to my only grandson. Well done dearest for your own triumph! ❤


message 16: by Andrew (new)

Andrew Dear Wil, (I came across your blog late), for decades I had the feeling that my father hit me a lot, whereas in fact I have not a single memory of being hit by him. You know. I thought I would feel like that about him all my life. Then, in 2015, I went through what he went through in the seventies, and suddenly - POW - I forgave him. Just like that. I now love him unconditionally, the emotional block removed which prevented anything but resentment all that time. So I am saying to you, hold on to that possibility, because it will change your life. It just takes a lot of time, sometimes, but it can happen. Love, A.


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