My Father's House
I have known many versions of my Father throughout my life.
The teen who graduated on Friday
and had me on Monday
and did his best to raise me.
The young man trying so hard
to build a life for his family,
using the blunt and sharp tools
he was handed
instead of the ones I needed.
The man who believed
that the belt
and his hands
and police
and institutions
would teach me lessons
he didn’t have the words to teach—
because his father
and his father before him
were good men in institutions
who did their best
to raise good men.
And maybe they succeeded
in raising good men.
But did they succeed
in having good relationships
with their children?
Were they close?
Did they know
they were loved?
Or did they just tolerate each other
and mourn the words left unsaid—
until a bugle,
a rifle salute,
and a folded flag
placed in waiting hands,
as if honor
could substitute
for tenderness?
I covered my grandfather’s corpse
with a flag
because my own father asked me to.
I uncovered—
and covered—
and arranged—
and did my best to take pictures
because he asked me to.
I did not share them.
Because even in my own grief
I knew better—
that he should not have to remember
his father that way,
but as the man
he looked up to.
That massive figure
in my father’s life.
A soldier.
A hero.
A grandfather.
Someone who put the safety
and security of those around him
before anyone else.
Barely present in mine—
but everywhere
in my body.
In the way my shoulders stay raised.
In the way my jaw locks.
In the way my chest tightens
when voices rise.
In the way I confuse love
with endurance.
Safety
with silence.
Affection
with compliance.
He wasn’t there—
but his shadow was.
And He wasn’t there either—
but His rules were.
Both distant.
Both watching.
Both shaping me
without knowing me.
I learned obedience
before trust.
Fear
before faith.
Survival
before love.
I learned coping skills
I never consented to—
hypervigilance,
self-erasure,
earning affection,
bracing for impact.
I learned how to disappear
to stay safe.
And now I am unlearning
what his love taught me—
that love is conditional,
that care comes with consequences,
that fathers only show up
when they’re angry.
And I am unlearning
what His love taught me—
that grace must be earned,
that pain is holy,
that suffering
is obedience.
Because my love
doesn’t feel like that.
My love lives in my hands.
In the way I sit with people
without fixing them.
In the way I soften my voice
instead of raising it.
In the way
I stay.
His will read with regret and grief
that he could not love his family
the way he wanted to—
because of violence and war
and trauma
and violence and war.
But my father loved him.
And I loved my father.
So I carried out his wishes.
But His Will?
God the Father?
How do you follow
God the Father
when your own father
has never followed you
into the depths of hell
he threw you into—
from a very young age—
without outsourcing repair
to cops,
military schools,
jails,
institutions?
Why am I so hard to love
without institutions?
Why can’t he love
what he created?
Why can’t He
love unconditionally?
It’s hard to find faith
in a hundred-million-dollar church
with a twenty-million-dollar sound system
that spends a million a year
on its community—
while welcoming anti-trans,
anti-queer,
anti-me rhetoric
into its halls and walls—
then passing the plate
for more money
and more money
and more money
to do it again
and again
and again.
The concerts are good.
But Christ’s teachings are missing
when it feels more like a brand
to be managed
than a message
to be lived.
Maybe I love Christ.
But I hate His Christians.
And His churches.
And the complacency
of calling a concert
and a short sermon
His good works.
Hatred and Hell
and discrimination
and His love
cannot coexist
in the same building—
but they can
in hearts
not ready to heal.
Maybe I am wicked.
But I am love.
And my love
does not demand suffering.
My love
does not need punishment.
My love
does not disappear
when someone fails.
And yet—
when his love
and His love
are what I crave
to feel whole enough
to surrender control
to a higher power
that can’t heal
what it broke—
it’s hard to feel
his grace
or His grace
when his actions
and His actions
have made me feel unsafe
and unloved
since my earliest memory.
On the drive home from church
I asked whether a baby
burns in fire and brimstone
before knowing Christ.
“Yes,” they said.
Because when asked why—
“Yes, queer kids burn in hell
for refusing His teachings.”
Unless they change
their wicked ways.
Unless
I change
mine.
Is it wicked
to love without shame?
To care less about labels
than the kind,
decent,
warm,
giving person
standing in front of you—
sharing their heart and home—
when His home
and his home
and His heart
and his heart
feel like hatred?
The message says
love and forgive
and love
and spread his word—
treat your neighbor
as you wish
to be treated.
Is that talking shit
about someone three feet away
because you’ve been to church
a handful of times in recovery?
Is it not wicked
to judge others?
To speak harshly
when I can hear you
the entire time?
I went to church
for the first time in decades
looking for reasons
to believe in His love.
Instead, I found
his critiques
and His Christians
serving hatred
on a platter—
like the offering plate—
asking for more money
and more money
and more money
to reach more people
to make more money.
If God exists,
why does His flock
muddy His words
until they sound like
his words
and his words
and his words?
If God exists,
He does not live
in a megachurch.
He lives
in courtyards,
small circles,
music,
shared meals,
people unburdening their hearts
without asking for payment afterward.
I feel Him
in the park—
serving the most vulnerable
of His flock.
I feel Him
in my siblings.
I feel Him
in my cousins.
But when He robbed me
of my family
long before their time
should have ended—
and when His hatred
moves through men and women
who attend church every Sunday
just to talk down
on those who’ve walked through Hell
and still search for His grace
without ever being shown His love—
Where do you go?
How do you kneel
and surrender
to a higher power
that has only ever hurt you
through His words
and his words
and his words?
My father’s house
was never my safe space.
My Father’s house
was never where I found grace.
But I can build one
for my son.
And his son.
And his son.
Still—
They say my father has changed.
And maybe he has.
He drinks less.
He says sorry more.
He blames alcohol
for decisions
that nearly destroyed
another marriage—
with abandon,
with carelessness,
with no regard
for the children
watching it happen.
His children.
His children.
And the children
they stitched together.
Would I have lost
my bonus brother?
My bonus mother?
Because of him?
Because of Him?
She lowers expectations.
She serves him.
Because of His will.
Because of vows
spoken in front of Him.
Because of the life
they built together.
And I find myself
hating him
and hating Him—
while loving her,
and my brother,
and my brother,
and my sister.
And despite everything
I still feel Him
in their presence.
But I feel his influence more.
And I feel His violence.
And his violence.
And the way
my body remembers
before my mind does.
He broke me.
And He broke me.
And once again
I am left
to put myself back together—
alone,
in an institution—
because he cannot repair
what he broke.
And neither can He.
#MightyPoets #MentalHealth #ADHD #PTSD #SubstanceUseDisorders #Depression #Grief #MightyTogether #CheckInWithMe #Trauma






