Showing posts with label 12-step. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 12-step. Show all posts

Sunday, June 19, 2022

JUNETEENTHprideFATHERSDAYrecovery


There is a snapshot of me at about 2 years old, perched on my seated father's extended leg like a jockey on a horse. My hands are held loosely in his. My father’s hair reaches his collar, appropriate for a liberal academic in the early 1970s. He has full sideburns, an audacity that once made my grandmother exclaim, “Why, Charlie! You look like a hippie.” 

We are in the living room in St. Paul next to the antique Danish spinning wheel and clogs my parents took with them from continent to continent on their student missionary travels. On the wall behind us is an explorer’s map of the eastern hemisphere, framed and hung as decoration.

In the old snapshot, I’m grinning broadly as my dad bounces me up and down, singing the French country tune “A da da! Sur le cheval de bon papa”


Sometimes, in the evenings, my father would sit in the basement and listen to his record collection, which ranged from symphonies to choral music to Peter, Paul and Mary and the Beatles. 


When I was eight, my dad taught me the basics of drafting and carpentry—his own fathers’s trade—building a sturdy plywood and lumber playhouse for me in the back yard, complete with a pitched, tar shingled roof. 


My parents had traveled the globe and taught me how to have sincere conversation and share a meal as comfortably with a Hmong refugee from war-torn Laos as with a member of Congress. I was taught which fork to use, the purpose of a caviar spoon, and what to say or not say to a server during a six-course meal. I also learned to eat fried okra with my hands, and how to dig into a pot of fiery hot stewed chicken using a handful of sticky rice as a utensil. 


My father taught me the art of storytelling. My childhood friends and I would beg him again and again to tell us about the time grandaddy Johnson got four flat tires. My family’s oral history was rich. 


The night I came out to my father as gay, he wept and embraced me, not completely understanding what it all meant, but affirming me as a worthy and loved young man.


For all of this, I am grateful. 


I am grateful for my father's simple humility. He recognized his own faults and was familiar with the words "I'm sorry”. 


He taught my five elder siblings and me that emotional vulnerability could be a man's strength, not his weakness. Emotionality was ok. In our home, it was permissible for a man to cry. More than once, my father reminded me that being a pacifist doesn’t make one a passive-ist. 


He was finally felled by the ravages of a disease he passed on to me through genes and by behavior—the disease of alcoholism and addiction. But my father died sober and spent the last years of his life as an active member of Alcoholics Anonymous. I remember, during his fading days, asking my father about the AA process of making amends. 


He told me he was dying with nothing unresolved, no aching wrong unaddressed. He said that forgiveness was an essential part of loving someone, and forgiveness was greatest gift I could give anyone, including myself.


Today I honor him.

Saturday, March 9, 2019

Dear Hobgoblin

RECOVERY JOURNAL
March 9th 2019

Hobgoblin,

I made this bed and we’ve lay in it for too long, sweating and sputtering, your wickedness slipping inside my blessings. You turn to me and leer at me with dirty, failing teeth and I leer back. I gasp a little gasp and cough. Uh-huh, yeah. 

I squeeze my eyes shut and lie very still. 

I hear you, then, in the dripping of water, in the barking of dogs, in footfalls on the pavement outside 1-2, 1-2. In garbage trucks. In the muffled laughter of the neighbors through the wall. 

You come with false prophesy. You whisper lies, little lies and little lies and big lies. You shout at me in my head until I’m off my head and off my rocker and I rock, cringing, knees tucked to my chest, palms pressed against my ears and you won’t shut up.

You are indecent. You bring me perversions, first fresh then ripe then rotten. Ill-begotten. I suckle your sweet nectar ’til it turns sour, then I keep suckling because I’ve forgotten how to drink anything else.

But I’m starting to remember. 

I will rise from this bed, from this tangle of sheets and funk. I will open the windows and open the doors and go outside. At first I will stagger, then walk, then run. But it can’t stop there. Because when I go on a run, you catch me. Always, every time. And you drag be back to that room of tucked knees and cringing.

I will fly. Man can fly when that which lifts him is a power greater than himself, fly with fingertips spread whistling in the wind. And the wind and the dogs and the trucks and the laughter will tell the truth and I will laugh with the neighbors, laugh with everyone, cry with everyone, be with everyone in exuberant caterwauling congress.


You will hold no quarter then, for the quarter you hold will be that stinking room, the room I have as of this writing left. Goodbye and goodnight. This night, this greatest of nights, I don’t wish you farewell, for you’re not fair and I hope your well runs aching-bone dry. 

Don’t try to follow me. This time, for the first time, I’m not leaving you a trail of bread crumbs. I am up, up overhead. And up is not somewhere you know how to look.

Sincerely,

Benjamin 

JUNETEENTHprideFATHERSDAYrecovery

There is a snapshot of me at about 2 years old, perched on my seated father's extended leg like a jockey on a horse. My hands are held l...