It’s funny, isn’t it? How something you’ve never seen can still feel like a ghost limb. Like an ache in a place you can’t quite locate, but you know, you know something’s missing. For as long as I can remember, it’s been like that. A gap. A silence whenever the word ‘dad’ floated into the air – from TV shows, from friends talking about weekend trips, from those Father’s Day commercials that always felt like a subtle kind of…mockery.
Mom just… wouldn’t. Wouldn’t talk. Wouldn't explain. Just a tight set to her jaw, a dismissive wave of her hand, and then silence. A silence thicker than any wall.
She’d said he was gone. Died. A long time ago, even before I was really aware of things. And for years, that’s all there was. A closed door. A locked room in the house of my life. And you don’t push, not really, when you see that kind of pain flicker in someone’s eyes. You learn to tiptoe around it. To accept the shape of your world as it is, even if it feels…incomplete.
I guess part of me always just filed it away. ‘No dad, story over.’ But underneath, a little seedling of ‘but…?’ always managed to sprout. Who was he? What did he look like? Was there a flicker of me in him? Or was I just… me? An island, unconnected.
Then that ancestry thing. Just a whim, really. Curiosity, maybe. Spit in a tube, send it off, forget about it. Until the email popped up. ‘Close relative match.’ A cousin. Third cousin, twice removed, something like that. Didn’t really matter the degree, just…cousin. On that side. The side that was supposed to be a blank.
Messages back and forth. Hesitant at first. Like we were both afraid to touch something fragile. Then, slowly, stories started to unfurl. Grandparents, great-grandparents… familiar names from Mom’s rare, whispered mentions of family. And then… it. Casual, almost throwaway. “Oh, yeah, I have some old family photos, somewhere. Let me see…”
Days went by. Days that stretched out, filled with this quiet, trembling anticipation I couldn’t quite name. Hope? Nervousness? A weird kind of… reverence? It felt almost sacrilegious to want this, to dig into this closed-off part of Mom’s life. But the wanting was there, a deep, insistent thrumming.
Then another message. “Found it! It’s not great quality, faded a bit, but… here he is.” A file attached. I stared at it. Just a thumbnail image. Grainy, indistinct. My heart… suddenly, it’s hammering. Louder than I expected. Louder than anything should be for just… a picture.
I almost didn’t click. Almost closed the laptop. What if it was… nothing? What if it was just some blurry face that meant nothing, changed nothing? What if it just made the ache worse?
But my finger moved. Mouse clicked. Image opened. Slowly, it loaded. Line by line, the pixels resolving, forming… a face.
And… oh.
It’s him. It has to be. Even faded, even in the distance of time and technology, there’s… a recognition. Not a memory, because there are no memories. But something deeper. Something in the shape of his eyes, the set of his jaw… a faint, almost ghostly echo of…me.
He’s younger than I am now, in the picture. Smiling, a little crookedly. Looking off to the side, as if someone just said something funny. He’s… real. Solid. Not a ghost, not a story, not a silence. A person. My person.
And it’s… mundane, isn’t it? Just a picture. Just a man, smiling. But it’s shattering. Shattering the years of… nothing. Of absence. Of that locked room in my heart.
I trace the lines of his face on the screen with my finger. The curve of his eyebrow, the faint lines around his eyes that hint at laughter, at living. And it hits me, with this quiet force, that he was real. He existed. Not just in some abstract idea of ‘father,’ but as a person. A man who laughed, who smiled, who… was.
And I am… connected. Suddenly, that feeling of being an island recedes. There’s a continent. A landmass. A root system that stretches back, back further than I ever knew. It’s not just Mom and me, adrift. There’s… him. There was him. And somehow, inexplicably, that ‘was’ transforms into an ‘is.’
I’m looking at my own face, reflected back across time, across mystery. I see… me. But I also see… him. And in that seeing, something clicks into place. Something that was loose, untethered, suddenly… finds its anchor.
It’s not about blame, or anger, or even understanding the ‘why’ of it all, not right now. It’s just… seeing. Recognizing. Being seen. Being recognized. Feeling… real. For the first time, truly real. Like I was always half a drawing, and now someone’s finally filled in the missing lines. Colored me in. Made me whole.
It’s just a picture. But it’s everything.
Share this post