My mom never sugarcoated anything—she believed honesty, raw and unvarnished, was kinder than lies that festered. When my dad died in a hospital room and I was twelve, she pulled my younger brother and me to the kitchen table. Calmly, folding her hands, she said, “Your father was a good dad.
But he was a terrible husband.”
No theatrics. No long explanations. Just a heavy, solid truth she had carried alone for years.
She didn’t let us attend the funeral. When relatives questioned her, she offered no arguments. She knelt to our level and explained that she wanted our last memory of him to be the man building birdhouses in the backyard, letting us hammer crooked nails while smiling as if it were the most important task in the world.
She didn’t want us to remember a box in the ground. Life moved on in its uneven rhythm. Mom worked harder, laughed less, and never spoke poorly of him—but she never softened the truth either.
He had loved us fiercely, yet failed her repeatedly. Both could exist at once, she said, and I carried that tension silently in my chest. I loved my dad—the one who taught me to ride a bike, who cheered at school plays, who called me “kiddo” like it was an honor.
But every time I missed him, guilt followed. Was I betraying my mom? Was I excusing his failures?
We never visited his grave. I told myself I didn’t need to. Remembering him at home seemed enough.
But deep down, I was afraid—afraid that facing the grave would unearth bitterness, in me or carved in stone, and that my love for him would finally shatter under the weight of the unknown. Last month, something shifted. Maybe age, maybe adulthood, or maybe watching my mom—older, quieter—sit alone on the porch with memories she’d never let go.
That night, I finally searched for my dad’s burial records.
