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The Boat In The Backyard A father's depression and a boy who finally
understands by Michael Spencer
When I was
twelve years old, my father bought a small aluminum boat, just enough
for two people to use for fishing in the local lakes. He put it in our
backyard. It had a tiny motor that sat in our shed. He bought the boat
so we could go fishing together, father and son. It was his dream, a
father's dream that I can now relate to as I share ball games and
movies with my own son. The boat never
took us fishing. In fact, it never got in the water. It remains there
in the back yard, photographed by my memory, waiting for a fishing trip
that would never happen. In my tendency to personify objects in my
world, I picture that boat as eager and expectant, then confused, and
eventually depressed. Its purpose- its joy?- was not to be fulfilled. At age twelve, I
was about as interested in my father's dream of fishing together as the
fish were in getting hooked, cleaned and fried. I resisted my father's
overtures with a quiet, but persistent force. I was always busy. There
was always something else to do. I wasn't interested in being outside.
My friends wanted me to play. Mostly, I wasn't interested because my
dad was interested, and I was
at war with my dad. Not a physical battle, but a back and forth
emotional war that had been going on as long as I could remember, and
now that my dad wanted
something from me, I was in a position to frustrate him. I felt the
power, and I used it to disappoint his dream. My father had never been like
other fathers I knew. By the time I was a teenager, he was unable to
work, but before that he'd done all sorts of things: worked as a flunky
at car lots, made tools at a tool and die company, made change at a car
wash, ran errands at local automobile race tracks, worked in the oil
fields, rented boats at a lake, janitored. While he was unable to work,
he was able to get out and do things he liked to do: fish, hunt
squirrels, pick up pecans, hunt arrowheads, go to ball games and races. My father was a collection of
contradictions and mysteries. He was deeply and genuinely religious,
but the entire time I knew my dad, I can never remember him in church
more than a handful of times. He was divorced (I never knew why), and
his chosen church- the Southern Baptists- ranked divorce just above
treason and murder on the sin scale, so it was easy to not be present.
He loved the Bible, and despised most church people as hypocrites. He was from the woods and
mountains of eastern Kentucky, but all my life we lived in cities, and
he hated the city. We lived in Kentucky, and he wanted to live in
Wisconsin. He was sociable and funny, the life of any gathering of
family or friends, but he feared and loathed almost any other kind of
gathering. He loved baseball, but wouldn't let me join Little League.
He had an eighth grade education, and was determined I would graduate
from college. He wanted me to be a dentist, and never once took me to
one. He was afraid of everything. The weather terrified him to the point of hysteria. Government paperwork terrorized him. Travel was so frightening to him that I never went on a school trip if he had any say in it. Fear dominated my father's life like no one I've ever met, then or now. As real as it was in my childhood experiences with dad, I couldn't help but sense it hadn't always been this way. I knew enough about his life to know he'd once been as wild and fearless as other boys, but somewhere along the way, something else entered the picture, changing my father from a man like other men into someone assualted, subdued and captured. I would always compare my dad to
other fathers or to my
uncles, and
something wasn't right. He was older than anyone else's dad. They ran
businesses, took their boys to Little League, built tree houses and
worked at factories. I understood my friend's dads. I understood the
men at church. I didn't understand my father. He was unlike them all,
different, unpredictable, like he was broken far under the surface. And
then, there was one break
in the darkness. I began preaching at age sixteen. Even as a young man,
I remember coming home and telling dad I was "called" to be a preacher.
He was moved. I couldn't appreciate then how much he had prayed for me,
and how he lived hoping my life would be useful to God in ways his had
never been. All I knew was there was finally some tenderness between
us. Some definable love and forgiveness. The
fighting did not stop. My
understanding of depression did not increase. But Dad, slowly, began to
go out again, drinking coffee with other men. On a few occasions, dad
even came to hear me preach. In all my life, I believe my father heard
me preach five times. Once he drove me to a small church where I was
supplying, and on the way back, gently tried to tell me my sermon
wasn't very good, which I suspected, but didn't want to acknowledge. He
began to show me kindness, and by God's grace alone, I started to
receive it. A
gentleness began to enter
our lives as I started to realize my father was a sick person. He'd
said this many, many times, and I didn't accept it, because it was too
complicated and I was too afraid of something that couldn't be fixed as
easily as a flat tire. But as I got older, it made more and more sense.
I started to notice my father in new ways, and to listen to him more
closely. I could see that my father didn't want to be this way. He was
covered in a darkness that clung to him like a wet blanket. He fought
against it, but couldn't toss it away. It had, inexplicably, become
part of him. He would have to live with it. I had
to live with it as
well. I had to accept who my father was, and how depression had made
him, and me, what we were. In my Christian journey, I was frequently
confronted with my duty and need to forgive others as God had forgiven
me. I never contemplated this truth without thinking of my father, and
how I had denied him forgiveness for this thing that had taken so much
of our family's joy away. I needed to forgive him, because he wasn't
responsible for depression. I needed to forgive the depression more
than my father. I needed to forgive myself for how I had reacted to
this unwelcome visitor. It's
funny how God works. I
took a job at a local grocery store, and how I spent the money I earned
became a major war zone with dad. My first paycheck turned into new
clothes, and dad- who had lived through the Great Depression- was
outraged that I hadn't put all the money in the bank or paid for the
family groceries. But later, I spent a good bit of my paycheck on a
citizen's band radio for my 65 Chevy. I cannot describe my father's
reaction, but it was explosive. So it
is divinely ironic that
within a few weeks, my father began buying CB radios. He was fascinated
by the hobby. Soon we had a base station in the house, radios in all
the cars and were joining CB clubs in the area. My father loved the
ability of radio users to make small talk with one another anonymously.
What medications, hospitals and therapy couldn't do, CB radio did. My
father came out of his depression by talking on the CB radio. My father
became "Two Bits," and Two Bits wasn't depressed. Dad
and I loved this hobby. I
could talk to him from wherever I was, and it was actually an honor to
be the son of the now famous "Two Bits." As my interest in the hobby
waned, dad's interest increased. In the years to come, he would buy
bigger and bigger radios, making friends with people all over the area,
the nation and even the world. Radio brought him a magnificent amount
of joy. Dad
sold the boat. We didn't
speak of the lost dreams of years ago or the bitterness that had
passed. I tried to never think of those days, but I cannot help but
think of them more and more as the years go on. I want my children to
know about that boat. I cannot touch it, but I can feel its presence
and its loss. It is real, because the love my father had for me in that
boat is real. After
I married, and became a
man, dad and I became friends again. We stopped fighting and enjoyed
one another. He was proud of me. He helped me, and listened to me. He
loved my wife and our kids. Depression never vanished, and dad's basic
personality never changed. We accepted that this was the life we had
shared. Depression had taken away more than I could ever calculate, but
I was determined to not spend any more time staring into the void. Depression
is now a reality I
face every day in my ministry with students. I know all about it. I
have my own thoughts and theories about its origins and power. I
believe in the mystery of its genetic and biochemical origins. I also
believe we contribute to it by our own thoughts, choices and actions.
It is complex, resisting simple treatments in some cases, surrendering
to the mildest of medications in others. We
were not so fortunate.
Depression invaded our lives when it was a monster of unknown origin or
power. I now recognize that dad was depressed before his heart attack,
but succumbed to a powerful depression in its aftermath. He did not
understand depression, and the chemical miracles were not available or
effective. I
believe that our world is a
fallen and ruined world, not so much in nature, where the glory of God
shines through, but in human beings, whose brokenness takes thousands
of different forms and reveals the tragedy of the wreckage that began
in Eden and continues in our lives. In this ruined world, depression is
a result of sin. Sin as it wrecked our minds, chemistries and emotions.
Sin as our thoughts became attracted to darkness rather than light. Sin
as we cower in fear rather than trust a trustworthy God who we cannot
see thorugh the darkness, and from whom we run away when we do glimpse
him. I am so glad that this God doesn't count on us to find him, but
has found us all along, and never lets us go. As the scripture says,
"Where shall I go from your Spirit?...even the darkness is as light to
you." Nothing
I believe about
depression makes depressed persons into "sinners" on some special
level. Like all of us, they are broken. Like all of us, God gives grace
that we can accept or reject. Like all of us, they are loved by God and
have the possibility of hope, and even healing. Like all of us, they
are gathered together in the wounds of Christ, and raised in his
resurrection. I have
compassion for my
depressed friends. In my own struggle with depression, I've benefited
from the lessons of my father's life. There are moments when I have
found myself in the chair, hands over my face, weeping. I've gotten up,
and decided to live. For myself, my wife, my kids, and my father. I
will not go into the same night if I can help it. I
believe that fathers are
put in this world to write life, goodness and wisdom into the hearts of
their children. The best fathers have written boldly, deeply and
legibly; they have written lessons that last a lifetime. Other fathers
write painful or erring lessons, putting into their children not a path
to love and joy, but a downhill slide to emptiness and desperation. My
father left many empty
places in my life where he should have written his own unique imprint
and example. I am acutely aware of these empty, fatherless places, and
the legacy I have inherited because of them. It was my father's
depression, and his fearful, unpredictable actions and inactions, that
left me with an abiding sense that I do not belong or deserve to belong
in the society of normal, happy people. It was that depression that
left me doubting my masculinity, and afraid to do a hundred things that
boys and men ought to do to know who they really are in the world.
Today, when you see me helping to coach our school baseball team, make
no mistake about it: I am out there making up for those days my dad
wouldn't take me to join Little League. It was
my father's depression
that left me with vacant places where unconditional acceptance and
fatherly delight ought to be. It was his fear of death that infected my
mind from the time I was small, so that every suddenly ringing phone or
unexpected noise can terrify me. In the place of the imprint of the
father, I have written many stupid and evil legacies of my own. In my
worst moments, I see my father's depression and darkness in myself.
I was so certain that I was doomed to live in illness and
depression, sin's false promises of joy looked convincingly
attractive. In my own despairing, angry and confused words, I've heard
the
echo of my father's cries. The
imprint of an earthly
father is a treasure. Thankfully, the imprint of the heavenly father is
a gift of grace that comes to the fatherless and the empty. Where my
father did not and could not affect my heart, because depression
wouldn't allow it, God, and his manifold gifts of love have penetrated
into the empty places and brought life, love and hope. In a hundred
different ways, experiences and relationships, God has been a father to
me in those places that my father left vacant. I also
know what my father
would have done if he had not been depressed, and what I would do if I
had the opportunity to do it all again. Of course, those times are
past, and realities are real. Still, it comforts me greatly to know
what could been and should have been. My father was not evil, but sick.
Our home was not cursed, but coping with an illness that none of us
really understood. The boat may have never seen the water, but the love
represented in that boat is as real as ever, and more precious with
time. I know
life will hold
experiences where depression will inevitably return and demand its
place in my life and family. I intend to resist, but I will also be
realistic. There is no outrunning our fallenness, and no ultimate
healing of our brokeness until heaven. There will be depressing days
and seasons, but I am determined that the lessons of my father's life
will not be wasted. I believe he is waiting for me, cheering me on in
the darkest of times. He made it home, and we will as well. In
fact, I am fairly certain
that heaven contains a lake, where my father is waiting for me in a
small boat. And I will not miss that afternoon of fishing. I promise. (8/27/04)
Michael Spencer is a writer
living in
eastern Kentucky, where he works at a Christian boarding school as
campus minister and assistant to the president. You can read his work
at www.internetmonk.com and michaelspencer.us. |