It is 27th June today. My father’s birthday. He
would have been 92. He died last December.
Sitting at my desk at work, a bit bored and needing distraction,
I open up Facebook. My brother has a post there marking the day – I hadn’t
remebered. Suddenly feel the need to write.
My father was a great man in so many senses. From looking
after his extended family, to being the best engineer I ever knew and a very
successful one, his capacity for hard work and duty to his family, loyalty to his
bosses. He achieved much and left a lot of good memories for everyone.
Towards the end of his life, he suffered from dementia and
it would be true to say that I was not very nice to him over perhaps the last
two years before he died. I could argue that I was protecting the people around
him – specifically my mum I suppose – as he turned into someone dragging
everyone down with him. Equally, it could be that I seized the advantage of him
not being very well to let my frustrations out, to get angry at him because I
could, while convincing myself that the only way to deal with a ‘bully’ is by
fighting back. Or that I do not have the patience to deal with uncomfortable situations. That conflict will always be with me, ever unresolved as I cannot
be judge and jury to myself.
Were we close? Not particularly. He was much older (42 when
I was born), somewhat distant, no interests in common. I went into heavy industry
and engineering because of him as I admired that life but we hardly ever spoke
about work. There were no hugs but he would be affectionate if I lay down on the
sofa with my head on his lap.
I think there was a mutual respect. He recognised that I
very rarely ‘asked’ for anything from him or my parents as a whole. One incident
I remember, I schlepped across London with golf clubs as my mum said she needed their
car and I could not borrow it – mine was with my wife. He got quite upset apparently
because I never asked for anything but had done so once and been denied! (This
is contrast to my brother and sister-in-law who had a much closer relationship
with far greater give and take.)
Then, one year (2015 I think) he told me that I was the only
one he could confide in – that he was being treated ‘like a servant’ in his own
home. My mother was and is not an easy woman and their's was a harsh relationship
from the outside – with mutual anger and recriminations that came out more and
more over the years. I told him that I was in the same boat and that it was our
lot in life to put one step in front of the other and carry on!!
But he never spoke to me about my admission at all. And while
it may be unfair to say so given all that he did for others, it prompts me to
think that there was a selfishness there – an ‘all about me.’ Behind a modest
exterior was someone who was proud of what he had achieved –
absolutely nothing wrong with that. Or was there? This was not a 'comfortable' pride - a man content. There always appeared to be a
role to be played, it felt like. Being the most hospitable, kind, generous –
and he was all of those things. And he was also successful and gave my brother
and me fantastic starts in life. But he never appeared to be able to enjoy what
he had done. It was always duty, the continuous feeling perhaps that he was being judged, there were always fears and negativity and hypochondria
… and, in a sense, perhaps it all built up inside him to the extent that he was
always the victim. There was this complete focus on work and confidence which
did not extend to much of the rest of his life. Totally comfortable with going
to Libya via Malta during American sanctions or fly in single prop. engines in
the Liberia but huge fears about a simple cataract operation or a minor back-ache.
What is the magic bullet that explains him? This mix of
greatness and smallness? I remember we were in Moscow once and there was a
problem with plane tickets. I expected this experienced business traveller to
take command, and yet he did not – he actively moved away from it by handing
the tickets over to someone else. He went down in my estimation a little then
though I was in my teens. He told me about how he left an organisation and told
his subordinates to decide amongst themselves as to who would take over. I saw
a letter to his eye consultant suggesting a cataract operation on one eye but
then rowing back and writing that he wasn’t at all suggesting a particular
avenue of action.
He was clearly very, very good at what he did – particularly
in the first half of his career – but always seemed to be afraid. My mother
relates the story of his boss saying that he ‘suffers from so many inhibitions,
always inhibitions.’ In which case he was lucky with his managers who
recognised the talent and supported his work.
So, in the end, he was a complex person just as we all are
and it is far easier to spot weaknesses in others than in ourselves.
He was what he was and the positives – certainly for me as
his son – outweigh the negatives. What are the lessons to be learned? …..next
post.