“FATHER’S DAY”
I remember
the incident so vividly. It was in the
summer of 1963 on the cusp of my senior year in high school. I would have another vivid occasion in that
summer in late August when I surreptitiously listened to Martin Luther King
Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech at the March on Washington, DC, and that is the
story for another blog. This incident
was earlier that summer, sometime in July.
I had just returned from a six week science camp at Ole Miss in Oxford,
Mississippi, a venue made possible because a bridge spanning the Mississippi
River at Helena had been opened in 1960.
It would be my first long time away from home, and I was dreading the
experience. Because we did not have a
car, our next door neighbors Mr. Mack and Ms. Fannie, drove with my mother to
take me to the camp. I was good at math
and science, and the teachers at segregated Central High School had recommended
me for the camp and had obtained a scholarship for me.
During the
orientation for the camp, the senior white leadership of the camp proudly
pointed out the bullet holes in the Lyceum building where Southern white manhood
had resisted the invading federal government, which had “forced” Ole Miss to
register one of its state citizens as a student – an African-American named
James Meredith – in the previous September, 1962. I am ashamed to admit that I felt pride at
that point in the orientation. I did
well in the science camp, and I thrived in it, so much so that I got my picture
taken with an Indian (they were allowed under the race caste system in
Mississippi) graduate student who was doing work on vortex flow and its potential
for harnessing energy. That photo and an
article on the science camp appeared in the Jackson Clarion-Ledger newspaper,
and that brings me back to the incident to which I referred earlier.
After I
returned home from the science camp, a letter came in the mail, addressed to
me. The return address was marked “GP
Stroupe, Jackson, Mississippi.” When I
read that return address, my heart leaped – it was a letter from my father, for
whom I was named! I had never received
any communication from him at all, in my 16 years of living. I had so longed for it, and here, finally,
was a letter from him. My heart was
pounding, as I opened the envelope and tried to anticipate what my father would
now say to me in his first engagement with me.
I opened the letter, and the newspaper article on the science camp fell
out – my father was proud of me! Then,
my blood boiled as I read the note, not from my father, but from his second
wife, the woman who had taken him from my family. It said that that they were so proud of me,
and oh yes, give the child support check to my mother. No word from my father – no word from
him. I remember cursing out loud and
flinging that letter across the room in anger.
“That ******* couldn’t even bring himself to write me and express his
praise for my work. He had to get his
wife to do it.”
I would
hear nothing else from my father for 9 more years, and even then I met him
accidentally – another story for another blog.
So, as I approach Father’s Day, I have even greater ambivalence about it
than I had about Memorial Day – at least for Memorial Day, there was some honor
involved. In this case and in this
relationship, I felt dishonored and disowned.
For a long time, I felt that my being disowned was my responsibility. I
allowed the anger of that summer of 1963 to dissipate back into anxiety,
wondering what I had done to force my father not only to leave me but also to
ignore me. Years of therapy and great
friends would begin to heal me, and I am grateful to all those who stepped into
that breech in my heart. Thanks to all
the men out there who took me in and nurtured me – and there are many! I honor them this Father’s Day.
My honoring
of Father’s Day also comes from experiencing Wordsworth’s line “The Child Is
Father to the Man,” from his poem “My Heart Leaps Up.” I use it differently than he did,
though. I mean it in the sense that I
received a lot of my fathering from being father to our kids David and Susan. They are a great joy to me, and I have learned
a lot about fatherhood from them. I’ve
made many mistakes with them, but through loving them and having them love me,
I have felt the redemptive power of fatherhood.
And I’ve sought to repay all those people, who stepped into the breech
with me when I needed fathering, by seeking to offer that to others.
So, on this
coming Father’s Day, let us give thanks for those who gave us fathering love,
whether they were our biological fathers or not. In the best sense, fathers teach sons and
daughters what real men are like. Not the immature men who seem to be stuck in
adolescence (like the President), but rather men who show us what manhood
really is – nurturing, protecting, forgiving, challenging, and most of all
loving. I’m hoping that all who are reading
this have experienced this fathering love from somebody in their lives. If not, contact me, and we’ll see what we can
do!
Thank you!
ReplyDelete