4 posts tagged “father”
There are two quick stories about things that have happened since my father passed that I wanted to share in this blog. These are things that I would normally write off as coincidence, but would like to believe have more depth than that. Frankly, I don't think it matters why these things happened so much as what they mean to me.
And so now the time comes to end this letter. It’s the toughest thing I’ve ever written, filled with things that I’ve never been able to really properly say. I really want the best for you and I know that it’s out of our hands at this point. I love you more than any words or any letter can properly express, and I know that you love me just as much.
Thank you for being there and loving me with everything you’ve had. You’ll always be in my heart and thoughts.
Love, Michelle
PS – I’ll see to it that Manny gets the shunning he deserves.
Did you see that last part? Because to the people not from Boston/who don't follow baseball - Manny was suspended from baseball for 50 days after being found using illegal substances. Looking at the opinions of sports newscasters, of fans around the internet, and of people living in Boston - it would appear that I won't have to do anything to facilitate a shunning of Manny Ramirez. The weird thing is that the story broke the day after my father's funeral. It's not that I think my father had any pull in this - that would be crazy - but IF my father had a chance to influence something like that happening from beyond the grave, that is certainly something he'd consider.
My father has cancer.
I got the call from my mother roughly a month ago, telling me that he hadn't been eating and had lost 15 pounds in a month. Foolish optimist that I am, I tried not to worry about it until there was more information as to what the problem was. I figured that maybe he had a stomach bug or something that was making him hungry less. A week after that call, I received another confirming that he has kidney cancer that had metastasized to his liver. I went to visit on the weekend following that call, and was distressed at what I saw: he was coughing alot, had a pain in his shoulder, and told me that he had a fever that hit him pretty much every night.
Tomorrow, he will be leaving for the Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center for surgery to remove his kidney. After that, there will be chemotherapy to attempt to cure his liver. And, having come home for the weekend to support the family and spend time with him, I'm realizing that it's only getting worse: the pain in his shoulder is really bad, and isn't explained by kidney or liver problems, which has me worrying more and more.
For my family's sake, I'm not going to go into much more detail in this blog yet. For the last month, my father had asked that I not publicize his illness because he didn't want people to worry, but at this point word has gotten out and most family friends know about it and so he gave me permission. All I will say is that my father is the person from who I have inherited my eternal optimism, and it is the most painful thing that I have ever experienced to watch it slowly turn into an acceptance that there is no guarantee that things will be all right. I have been wavering in how to take this turn of events. Part of me wants to focus on my hopes that he will be cured and no longer have to suffer through a whole lot of pain. Another part of me, though, is trying to prepare for the fact that, after I finish this post and go to sleep, I may have just experienced the last full day of getting to be around my father.
I guess that brings me to the reason that I'm writing this post. As I mentioned in the post before this, possibly the biggest regret that I have in my life is the fact that I waited so long before coming out to my parents. Something he said to me today is that he feels like he's being robbed years of being able to watch me develop into a happy and confident woman. Ironically, I waited so long because I was afraid that I would lose my family's love and support, and because I waited, I'm stuck living with the reality that I made the wrong choice. It hurts a lot. With that in mind, I have since learned not to keep secrets back from those who care about me, which is why I'm writing these thoughts out for people to see.
To the religious people reading this blog: please keep my father in your thoughts and prayers over the next few days.
To the people who still have one or both parents around: tell (or show) them how much you love them. There may come a time when you're no longer able to.
To those that have lost loved ones to cancer, or lost loved ones in general: I have a new understanding for how tough this is, and am truly sorry for all others that have had to go through this.
To the transgendered people reading this who are struggling with coming out: try and have faith in your family's love for you, because if you are correct, you'll find that the support of a loving family is the single best thing you can have.
To my friends, coworkers, and extended family that have known about this: thank you for your support that you've shown me and my family in the last month. It has helped me a lot to know that there are so many people who care.