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The word “estrangement” is defined as “the physical and or emotional distancing between at least two family members.” Typically, it’s when an adult child ceases contact with a parent. Most definitions I find describe it as a broken relationship involving one rejected party or an arrangement is considered unsatisfactory by at least one of the people involved.
The simplest definition I can find describes estrangement as “the fact of no longer being on friendly terms or part of a social group.” I like this definition best. In the case of my father and me, I don’t think of the relationship we are in as “broken.” I think it’s for the best that we don’t speak to one another. Maybe for some people, estrangement is simply a fact.
The last time I heard from my dad was about a year ago. He sent me an email with his phone number. “Hey, it’s your paps,” the message read. “Will you give me a call? It’ll only take a second.”
I was in Scotland with my boyfriend, meeting his parents and extended family for the first time. I remember standing alone in the guest room of my boyfriend’s aunt’s house in Edinburgh, the din of family just beyond the door.
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