by JANE COPELAND
The relationship between my dad and I has always been thorny. In fact if I am honest, I would say I have spent most of my life almost hating him. I say ‘almost’ because if I had actually hated him, I wouldn’t have felt the angst I did over what I perceived to be an incredibly poor relationship.
As a young girl I felt my father wasn’t there for me. The encouragement I yearned for was absent, the affection non existent. We had few direct conversations and spent little time together. Only once did I see him show what I deemed to be real emotion and that was when, in the last year of high school I decided to leave my private school and switch to public, he cried.
I would jealously watched my friends with their fathers, putting the sum of their experiences on a pedestal. I dreamed of outings with my father where he laughed and cuddled with me. My anger that this was not my reality had the momentum of a building wave, crashing down on me as I drowned in a sea of resentment.
If you ask my family, they will tell you that my father and I got on badly because we were so alike. Naturally I could not see this fact, and recoiled with horror every time it was brought to my attention, which was often.
The foundations of the unsavory dossier I had created over the years, held the resulting emotional barrier in place. The distance between us grew so great, that as teenager and as a twenty-something year old, if my dad had to pick me up from somewhere, I dreaded it. I felt self conscious driving in a car with just him, and awkward being left alone in the same room. There really was no relationship.