"Ice upon ice, and yet, inside,
she melted and mourned all the same."
Katherine McIntyre
My parents would go on fishing or hunting trips while my older sister and I would stay with neighbors. When I was in second grade, my parents left with a few couples for Canada. I experienced great anxiety watching my father drive away. I was exceptionally bonded with my dad and it was difficult to fathom life without him.
As an hour slowly drifted by, I experienced panic as I could not remember what my father looked like. Hard as I might, I could not conjure up his features. In sheer fright, I ran to my sister begging her to tell me, "What does Daddy look like?"
When my parents returned a week later, my sister of course, told the story to the family and friends. I felt shamed, ridiculed, and unprotected. The joke lived on through my adulthood. Whenever I went any where, my father always asked if I wanted a photo of him to take with me. Even though I am no longer that little girl, the memory of perceived abandonment stays with me.
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