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Growing Pains
By Bryan Taylor ©
He made her cry again. I remember laying awake
staring at the ceiling. I was probably 14 or 15 years old. They're
arguing
they try to be quiet so we won't hear, but that's no
good. My heart is as black as the darkness in my bedroom. I hate
him! I wish that he was dead
over and over again. Someday
I will be grown up, and he will be sorry. I swear that someday my
mom will never cry again.
I remember being much smaller, hiding under
the kitchen table. They were both yelling. He was throwing stuff.
It was the first time I ever saw him angry. Not the last.
I remember my step-brother and I fighting. He
beat my step-brother with a belt for making me cry. He beat me for
crying. I remember him with a pair of scissors and a razor, pretending
to cut chunks of our hair until one of us decided to tell him why
we were fighting.
I remember wishing that I had someone to teach
me to play ball. I remember going to Cub Scouts on "Father
and Son Day" with mom. I remember him beating our pet Labrador
in the head with a shovel because he got in the way. I remember
feeling like I was somehow always in the way.
I remember being hungry and afraid to eat because
I knew I would get in trouble for it. I remember living in a shack
with no plumbing or heat because he was out spending all of his
money on his girlfriend, his guns, and his car.
I remember him grabbing me by the hair and yanking
me out of the chair. I remember him throwing me to the floor, and
I remember the shoe smashing into my groin as I lay on the floor
in a ball.
I remember a lot about my step-dad. For all
of these years I've despised him. Just to hear his name made my
jaw tighten and the veins pop out on my forehead. The dream of that
teenage boy never went away. I still wished him death and all the
misery that could find him between now and then. I remember one
of the last times that I saw him: he drove my mom to pick me up
from the police station after I had been arrested for robbing a
convenience store. Ha had a look on his face that seemed to say
to me, "I told you so."
That was 1984, and I guess I'm right where he
figured I'd be all those years ago. Every day of those twenty years
I have had the blackest of hate for him. Even throughout my Buddhist
practice when dealing with other sensitive issues I never for a
second considered letting go of my anger towards him. I've never
had an ounce of empathy for him, never a thought of forgiveness.
Not until a couple of months ago. I received
a letter from my mom saying my step-dad's mother had died. My mom
had attended the funeral even though she and my step-dad are now
separated. She told me how he looked and said that he wasn't holding
up so well. From her description I had a vivid picture of him old,
broken, and grief stricken. My step-day had finally lost.
He finally knew what it felt like to be alone;
he finally knew my helplessness. It was time for me to relish a
taste of victory. But it didn't work out that way. His pain didn't
bring me one ounce of joy. Instead, for the first time in my thirty-seven
years, I saw that he had feelings. He loved and missed his mother,
just as I love and miss mine. I thought of what that must be like.
I thought of how devastated I would be if I were to have to walk
in those shoes.
At first, that was all I could do. All I had
was some empathy. Slowly I began to realize that his suffering had
not just started upon his mother's death. His misery has been with
him all long. His anger and his nastiness were by-products of his
unhappiness. He has been running through samsara, trying to do it
all his way, just like me. The man I'd become wasn't really much
different from him. My hatred for him had left me bitter about life
in general, and because of it, I hurt the ones I loved and those
who loved me. Empathy took on a new light. I felt pity, some forgiveness,
and maybe a little bit of compassion.
It was all so unexpected to me, I had to go
back and rehash a lot of old junk that I really would have rather
left in the dark. In doing so I realized I remembered a lot about
him but I had only dwelt on the memories that made me a victim.
I'm not saying that he was Mr. Nice Guy or that I condone the way
he treated me and my mom. I'm just saying that as I reflect about
it, there were times when he was really okay.
I remember being in the bi-centennial parade
dressed as a soldier. He gave me a real rifle to march with. (It
wouldn't shoot, but so what-it was mine.) I remember the pinewood
derby car that he helped me build. (He did most of the work. I was
fairly inept at being a craftsman. Still am.) Man that car would
go. I remember us going to the beach with the metal detector and
digging for buried treasure in the sand. I remember us making those
old reel to reel home movies on his camera. I remember the day that
we went and picked up that Labrador puppy and how that puppy became
my refuge during tough times. I remember that bicycle that he made
me out of old spare parts. It was the coolest bike in the neighborhood
(until I wrecked it). I remember how I used to steal his cigarettes
and try to smoke (so I could be cool like him). I remember he would
sometimes let me steer the car when we were driving down the road.
I remember how he always smelled good, a mixture of musky cologne
and Marlboros.
I remember a lot of things. I'm just starting
to realize that they weren't all bad. I spent so many years remembering
the pain that I never thought to remember the joy. This path that
I'm on never ceases to surprise me. Just when I feel like I am going
nowhere something happens to make me realize just how far I've come.
He's an old man now. Yesterday I heard a song
on the radio called "Live Like I'm Dying." It made me
sad because I realized that more than likely he's going to die like
he lived. For the first time I wish him well, I offer him forgiveness,
and I pray that he'll find peace.
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