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I feel the absence of my father in the most mundane
moments.... Like the times when I need to shave in order to look
presentable for some outing, only to realize I don't know how to
shave. I've never learned. Before the fuzz on my face could
properly be called stubble, my father had already been gone four
or five years.
The irony is that the two personal items he left behind were
his razor and his shaving brush, retired in a casual lean in his
green shaving cup. I saw those items daily for several years after
my father left. The fragrance from his shaving cream had long
since evaporated, but the tools for a manly polished appearance
were still there reminding me that he wasn't.
Growing up without my dad didn't seem all that difficult at
first. Living in small town North Carolina, I would still see him
from time to time. On those occasions he would give me some
spending money and ask if I was doing well.
When I didn't see him, I'd sometimes get "updates" on his
whereabouts from my older siblings or from friends who
thought I'd be interested to know. Truth was, I knew where he
was and what he was doing. The entire town did. And I assume
they talked about it. But we rarely did in my home. No one
brought it up all that much.
Dailyness took over and life went on.
A One-Woman Boy
Perhaps the first hint that something was missing came
when I really grew interested in girls. I was odd for my age. As a
middle schooler, though the predominant social message and
expectation was "play the field," especially for us budding
athletes, I wanted desperately to be a "one-woman man." I didn't
know why, but I felt the desire so urgently that I think I scared a
lot of nearly-pubescent girls away. Too serious way too
soon.
Looking back, I tend to think that my "one-woman man"
desire sprouted from the knowledge that my father and mother
never married and the knowledge that he was habitually
unfaithful to my mother. I witnessed the pain my mother
sometimes tried to hide, and I saw the resentment welling up in
the faces of my siblings, who had a different father and were old
enough to understand the weight of things.
At some point, I vowed that I did not want to be like my
father. I did not want another mother's face to show that kind of
pain. And, on some level, I began to resent my father.
Teenagers Perish for Lack of
Knowledge
The second clue that something was missing came while in
high school. I noticed in my best friend's relationship with his
father a camaraderie I never knew. It was not simply that this
dad showed up for football and basketball games, or that he
gave my friend an allowance. And it wasn't that his father was
married to his mother and that they all lived together; he wasn't
and they didn't. What I noticed was that they were not exactly
peers, but they shared in life so profoundly that it created a
longing in me.
The fathers of two friends adopted me as their "son." They
looked after me, encouraged me, and challenged me in some
important ways. But neither man was my father.
Neither was available whenever I needed them, and neither could
be consulted in the most intimate of matters. So, I spent much
of my adolescence making my own rules, seeking my own way,
and consequently hurting a lot of people.
There were the loyalties I broke, the girls I defrauded, and
the responsibilities I neglected. I betrayed a friend by sleeping
with his girlfriend. An aborted child could have been mine; I
didn't ask. And by the time I was a junior in high school, I was
arrested for stealing; at the time, I had a pocket full of money
earned at my summer job.
You could say I was arrested for being stupid. More
precisely, though, my sins were maturing and controlling my
life.
Had my father been there, perhaps I would have had
someone to correct me, instruct me, to hold me responsible,
and failing all that kick my butt when necessary. At the least, I
think I would have had someone to talk to, to ask questions of,
and to share in life.
The Lingering Effects of Father
Absence
In an interesting sort of way, life after dad has been an
attempt of sorts to escape the effects of not having a father
around. Father absence has a very real and lingering presence in
a boy's life. You're haunted by the absence, and all you want to
do is escape the dark void that's always there.
There are the subtle adult reminders of father absence. How
does one muster a decent shoe shine or tie a nice Windsor? I
spend a considerable amount of time in suits, so these become
tiny ever-present reminders of having grown up without a
father. There are the mornings when I feel unpresentable
because I need a shave and can't. These are the moments that
surprise me and bring me to tears. There's so much I don't know
because I didn't know my father as a boy should.
I'm all grown up with a wife of 15 years, two wonderful
daughters, and a child on the way. I'm humbled by two things:
how generously the Lord has been to me in my wife and
children, and how little I know about being a man, husband and
father.
I am acutely aware that not having a father active in my life
left me without a model to observe, to learn from, to sometimes
imitate and sometimes knowingly adapt. I can't fathom how
much I don't know. The car or the home needs a repair; I don't
know where to begin or how to be sure the mechanic or plumber
isn't pulling a fast one. More importantly, I don't always quite
know how to engage the repairman as a man in an
assertive, confident way. Alpha male games are sometimes
bewildering. I'm prone to either under- or over-react. I usually
over-react; my earliest and most formative models have been
buddies from the pool hall or images of black males from
entertainment and sports. That's not helpful if godly maturity is
what you desire.
Then there is the constant battle with trust. I don't trust
myself to be the one-woman man I've longed to be since
childhood. I'm terribly afraid that I will fail and my wife will wear
my mother's look of rejection and pain. I'm afraid that this is the
one area of life where I will turn into my father. If you've never
benefited from a model of trusting love, how do you cultivate
and protect such love?
I borrow from the good model that my father-in-law
provided, but there is that nagging suspicion I'm missing
something. And there are the times when that nagging is a
missing someone whose absence I feel even when it comes to
cherishing my wife.
The Loving Father Who Is Always
There
About 12 years ago, the Lord in His sovereign mercy saved
this virtually orphaned child and adopted me as His own. I
cherish this truth, even though it's not always easy to grasp. God
reveals himself as a Father who never leaves nor forsakes us. My
response to this truth vacillates between relief and joy on the
one hand, to doubt and insecurity on the other.
Christian clichés and knee-jerk assurances are not
always helpful. I have to fight for this truth, for joy in the
knowledge of God, and to avoid projecting my earthly father
onto my heavenly Father.
I suspect I'm not alone in this. The 70 percent of
African-American children born without the benefit of both a
mother and father committed to one another in marriage also
fight to shave off the haunting effects of growing up without
dad. I pray that they too will know a special measure of grace
from that Father Who never fails.
In my years of walking with the Lord, I've learned a lot. My
heavenly Father has taught me lessons that my earthly father did
not. I've seen how my heavenly Father gave His only begotten
Son to die for those who turn away from their sins and turn
toward Him in faith, and now I trust I am less selfish than I
otherwise would have been. I've experienced the correction of
my heavenly Father, and now I trust I am more righteous and
peaceful through His correction than I was during those rogue
youth years. And my heavenly Father who promises never to
leave me has taught me to persevere with my wife and my
children. I'm a pastor now, and I trust the Father has called me
to worship Him in spirit and truth, despite the fact that the first
time I saw my earthly father in a church was at his funeral.
I'm learning and I'm growing. With each year, I am by the
Father's grace less haunted and more liberated from that terrible
absence. I'm thankful for the good healing the Lord has and is
doing in my life.
If only I could find someone to teach me to shave.... But
then again, I do still wish to remember my father.
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