It Changes Everything

He used to call me baby, that was his way, until . . . Until he had to leave. I was twelve. Twelve years old, wondering what I did wrong. No one could tell me. I wasn’t old enough to be in the middle of the conversations birthed between adults. And as a Southerner, you listen to your elders. You heed their advice.
So, I thought my light had faded — if Daddy wasn’t calling me baby anymore . . . Who else would? Who else should? Was I even still deserving of that term of endearment?
My mom had been piecing together our puzzled lives. We had become the church feature — the company billboard for broken homes. They wanted me to tell the boys. To let my brothers know our family had collapsed. But how could I? I was still trying to figure out who was going to call me baby — still trying to find the reason why he had to leave.
I had an inquisitive mind so naturally, I wanted to know what went wrong and if I was it—the wrong that suddenly swarmed our home . . . was I it?!
I turned to my mom as I so often did during times of distress to perhaps pull the truth out of her . . . “Mom, what did I do?”
In the funk of a lead-ridden home, my words were useless. They did not exist.
I did . . . I did.
I still lived amongst the shadows of decrees and halves—“You’ll get them on this weekend, I’ll get them on that weekend . . .” And so on and furthermore. We were split in two. Halves of a whole. Soon to be halves of a half. Quartered. We had been made into pieces — cracked instantly on direct impact. No one would put us back together again.
I wasn’t old enough to be in the middle of the conversations birthed between adults.
Time shifted — we all grew up and out of our old selves. When I was nineteen years old, another girl was born. This one, you know very well. When she was sixteen, I realized, you had more years with her. You don’t forget her age. She doesn’t have to remind you. You’ve been to every recital, every honors night school function, and every church-affiliated soirée. I’ve often thought, it is better this way. She gives you purpose. She doesn’t question why you left — she doesn’t have to.
She could turn a corner and find you right there — waiting . . . waiting to hug her. Waiting to hold her. You had been the pillar in her dreams — strong enough for her to lean on — safe enough for her to discard her fears. I wish I had that. That . . . security and assurance. I dream of it to this day but it is not within my reach. That ship has long since sailed — I stand at the dock battered by the untimely waves.
I wandered far away, lost myself in the clouds above my head, searching for the years before the when that stultified my efforts in loving you and scattered all of us away from what was concrete. Nothing has been what I hoped it would be. Growing up without you—salty taste lingers in my mouth, a hint of envy . . . A bit of jealousy.
She had the traditional family unit— nuclear . . . Functional.
I’ve often thought, it is better this way. She gives you purpose. She doesn’t question why you left — she doesn’t have to.
The funny thing is, I say I am grown — I am mature. But truth be known, I still can’t talk about this without breaking down into a tear-consumed toddler who isn’t getting what she wants. And this, I am told, is normal or expected. Divorce. Divorce. Divorce squirms all up in my bones. I twirl the words on my tongue and the tears fall. They fall . . . I wonder if it does the same thing to you—it does not. It cannot.
And maybe, that’s why we’re estranged. That’s why we’re still holding on. No . . . That’s why I’m still holding on to pain and the moment you’ll once again call me baby.
©2016 & 2021 Tremaine L. Loadholt
This essay originally began as a narrative poem that had been published in In Two Minds on April 24, 2016. Its revision is now hosted at Age of Empathy via Medium. Thank you for reading.
Just because something is “normal” or “expected” doesn’t make it hurt less! This is so poignant, Tre.
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💙
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Dear Tre, it saddens me that you (and millions of others) have had to go through that. A bone can’t be unbroken, but it can heal stronger than before the break; I’m praying for the latter.
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I always am too, Mitch, praying for the latter. Thank you.
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Whew, your word mirror my heart about my relationship with my dad. SMH…this pierces my heart.
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🙏
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This one is heavy and full of emotion. Well-written
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Thank you kindly for reading and commenting and for the follow.
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Beautifully written and articulated, Tre. I hope that you can find peace with this one day. *hugs*
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Peace, Lisa. Thank you.
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trE, this was still so poetically written. The hard facts are that divorce is NEVER the child’s fault, but boy do we think it is. I even wrote a book covering this issue that will be out June 19th. There are so many things that children of divorce need to work through and what you wrote draws the attention necessary to remind the children that it is NEVER their fault.
Blessings and honor, Christine
PS: This blog caused me to follow you 😀
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Thank you so much, Christine. I truly appreciate your words here and for the follow as well. KUDOS to you for the upcoming book release. We need more literature detailing what children of divorce go through and how we have to struggle sometimes to keep ourselves sane in the process. Peace and blessings.
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Divorce is a vicious reality that shattered children and harms their mental health. One should be mentally strong to face these problems.
God Bless you.
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Divorce shatters families in so many ways.
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It does. Quite true.
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This was really good and unfortunately I can relate.
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🙏💙
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trE, as usual, this is very relatable. I don’t know if you already have or not, but you may be interested in a book I edited called Daddy: Reflections of Father-Daughter Relationships. Sending you peace and love.
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Thank you, Kathy, I appreciate that. And I appreciate you reading, connecting, and responding. 🙏
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I’m also dealing with a trauma from when I was 12. Right on the doorstep of big changes within oneself. Still crying. One could vomit instead actually.
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Peace, Petru. I hope you fine your way through to the other side of it better than you were before. *Big hugs*
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Just as there is never a victim-less crime, when children are involved there is never a no effect divorce.
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Amen, Peter. Amen. Thank you for reading.
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