Saturday 1 February 2014

A Dumbass' Thoughts On Being Fatherless.

So my father died when I was young, not so young that I don’t remember him, but young enough that it’s made a difference to my whole life. Before that my parents were divorced and in the 80/90’s when international travel wasn’t so common place I would see him once every two years. In fact, when he died I hadn’t seen him for 4 years; my brother and sister, older and at the time traveling backwards and forwards from Pakistan were much luckier, having visited him a few months previously.

I remember the phone call when it came, it was my aunt from Lahore, she spoke to my brother and I remember the colour leeching out of his face and he only said two words ‘Daddy’s dead’ – there wasn’t any preamble or preparation – the truth was as stark as that. It was a Saturday I was home from school. My aunt still called my mother Bhabhi (sister in law) even though my parents had been divorced for 10 years; my mother started crying and arranging the practicalities of sending my brother back to bury my father, reassuring my aunt he’d be there as soon as humanly possible, to not bury my father till his son arrived.

Forgotten, I walked up to my bedroom hid under the duvet and cried for hours, days, maybe it was years. At the time I cried for him – daddy – who died alone because I left him. I was the one of my siblings who was much more attached to our father than our mother – I lived with him at his house and merely visited my mother, but when my mother left Pakistan with my step-father I had gone with her. Didn’t matter I was only small – all I knew was that even at the time in my tiny head leaving him had seemed wrong. I had planned ALWAYS, from the age of 7, to do my A ‘Levels and go back to him. But that never happened, so every year since 1993 on the 23rd of January I cry for myself; for all that I lost that one Saturday.

I never saw my father through the eyes of an adult. Maybe if I had I wouldn’t have this daddy-shaped hole in my soul. He didn’t survive to that age when one day in early adulthood we realise our parents are flawed human beings and not perfect, that though they may do their best it’s not always the right thing. Only my mother has that distinction. My father remains that big, incredible man who used to carry me around to his business meetings, to his film office, to oversee his cinemas, I was constantly with him. He even took me to India when I must’ve been about 2; I have vague memories of shapes and colours of walking around the Taj Mahal with him.

My father owned Mehfil Cinema in Lahore and I spent more time there as a 3/4 year old than I did even in school. I used to go to school to sleep!! Which earned me the distinction of being the only child ever (probably) to fail kindergarten! But I was a queen amongst my peers – my father would give me 100 Rs. a day spending money in a time when that was a poor man’s salary. I had an account with every popcorn, ice cream/sweet stall in and outside his cinema – I used to walk around with my own entourage of poor kids from the local area, feeding them sweets, having daddy settle the accounts! I have no memories of my mother from that time; my father dominates them, the smell of brylcreem still makes me weep.

I remember when I had moved to London and the first time my father came to visit, I was just home from school and my brother told me there’s someone outside to meet me. I walked out the front door and my father stepped out of the car. It was like that first breath you take after being suffocated.

My two favourite memories of my father’s trips to London are going to see the Tom Hanks film “Big” with him and my brother, where daddy and I sat together and my brother sat behind us, interjecting now and again. Leaning between us and whispering.  And the time when I had got my sister to wax a part of my leg as a lark when she was doing her own waxing – I was so impressed by the results that when went to see daddy where he was staying, I pulled up my skirt and asked, “Daddy, see doesn’t my leg look sexy? It looks sexy doesn’t it?” I still remember him laughing and hugging me close and saying, “Yes, very sexy!” I was 8.

I am not an envious person by nature, thank God. But I envy people who have fathers who love them. It’s like someone always has your back no matter what. I haven’t felt safe since the day my father died. I think mother’s make us feel loved – and boy do I feel loved, but it’s our father’s that make us feel safe – against the big bad world, like someone is there fighting our battles with us. It’s hard to fight on your own. Sometimes I’ll see my brother hug one of his sons a certain way, or smile at one of them in a particular manner and I’m hit by a flash of memory and a pain so acute it’s almost physical.

Being fatherless is hard. Being motherless would probably be harder – so I am luckier than many but not as lucky as some.

Like Philip Larkin says,
“They f@ck you up, your mum and dad,
They may not mean to, but they do.”

Even when they’re great and love us, they f@ck us up, if we are lucky enough not to cry because of them, we’re doomed to cry for them.