My mom never softened the truth, even when it hurt. When my dad died, she sat my brother and me down and said, “Your father was a good dad. But he was a terrible husband.” She didn’t let us attend the funeral, choosing instead to preserve our memories of him as the man who built birdhouses with us and smiled at our crooked nails like they mattered. She never spoke badly about him, but she never rewrote reality either. He had loved us deeply, she said—but he had also failed her. Both things were true, and both had to stand.
Growing up, that truth lived uneasily inside me. I loved my dad, but every time I missed him, guilt followed close behind. I didn’t know how to hold both loyalties without feeling like I was betraying one of them. We never visited his grave, and over time, I convinced myself I didn’t need to. But the truth was, I was afraid—afraid that seeing his name carved in stone would force me to confront everything I didn’t understand, and maybe change how I remembered him.
Years later, something shifted. Maybe it was age, or watching my mom grow quieter with time, carrying memories she never shared. I finally went to the cemetery, expecting something forgotten or neglected. Instead, I found a clean, carefully kept headstone—and beside his name, a plaque that stopped me cold: “The man who couldn’t be a husband, but never stopped being a hero to his kids.” I knew immediately it was my mom who had placed it there.
In that moment, everything made sense. She hadn’t kept us away out of bitterness—she had protected us until we were ready to understand. She had carried the weight of their broken marriage so we could hold onto the love we needed. Standing there, I felt something inside me finally settle. I could love my father without betraying my mother. I could honor both truths without choosing between them. And for the first time, that love didn’t feel divided—it felt complete.