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When Your Heart Lags Your Brain

4/28/2014

14 Comments

 
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The heart is a very strong organ. It is faithful to which it loves even when all evidence appears that is useless to remain so. This allows us to have hope and patience for the people we hold dear.  It also gives those we love time to turn themselves around when they may have been failing us. 

This is a personal story which I am sharing only to help families that may be in a similar situation. Most who read this will hopefully not relate directly, but hopefully you can share it with someone who does.

I loved my 
dad. He was so interesting and mysterious. He did things I wanted to do. He had been to places I wanted to see. Stories of his travels had me breathlessly spellbound. I longed for his attention and waited for him to come home - sometimes for hours, sometimes for months, even years. My Dad was slight in build but had very strong hands. He was a real gentleman, charismatic, very intelligent, and well-liked by most people. There was just one huge problem, my dad was a raging alcoholic. 

Some dads are ‘stealthy’ alcoholics that can still function in a somewhat, reasonable manner. Not my dad. When my dad drank he became an entirely different person from the one I just described. His language became crude and his actions were awkward, then catatonic. His charming persona became slovenly and indecent, a dreadful person to be around. These are difficult things to say about my father, but they are true. With all that, I still rooted for him whenever I could!

When I think of "Speedo", his nickname, I think of him as "Dad", but he never earned that title. He was our biological father but an appalling example of a husband or caretaker. A lone wolf by nature, he would often disappear for months, going to sea as an able-bodied seaman. He once told me that while at sea he never drank, but as soon as he got to a port, he could not pass up the first bar. I believed the last part of that statement. He did this knowing he had six children in far-away Missouri that could use his love and support.

PictureMy Dad at sea in his later years
He once told my mom, as he walked out of the house going to who knows where, “You take care of them, you’re better at it than me”. “Them” was my three brothers, two sisters, and me! He was irresponsible and unapologetic. Our family could never count on him for anything. The funny thing is, on the occasions when he did provide for us, we were thankful to him. I guess because it was unexpected.

When I was in my early-teens, there was a conflict between my mom and dad, divorced by this time. Of course, this wasn’t unusual and the circumstances aren’t important. What was unusual is that I saw this incident as a chance to support my father. He was not drinking during this time and could win anyone over with his sober charm. I wanted him to be the virtuous one for once. Never was I against my mother, just longing to support my dad. However, I felt very guilty for rooting for my dad over my mom, who had always been there for us.

What I did was not so unusual. In supporting my dad, despite all the wrong he had done, I was putting my heart before my brain. We do it all the time, and I see nothing wrong in that until it starts hurting you and/or others. That's when your brain must catch up. My dad was never able to beat his alcoholism nor do right by his family, but I gave him every chance. I’m glad I did because it might have worked. I stopped, however, when I became a man with my own responsibilities. I then confessed, to myself, what I really already knew. That he would never change. I couldn’t let him affect my life or my own family's lives any longer.


He passed away in 1996 of sclerosis of the liver. Ironically, I was on the Pacific Ocean on the stern of the U.S Abraham Lincoln on a dark night, looking at a million stars and thinking about my dad, when a seaman walked up to me and said I had a message in the radio room. This only happens at sea when something bad happens. When I arrived, my wife was on the phone and she told me he had passed away - and I became very emotional. I had just lost my father, but it could have been my wife or one of my kids. Sadness and relief at the same time.

If you have a spouse or parent that is failing your family, don’t let your brain get too far behind your heart. You will have to let them know that you need their love and support. Let them know how important they are to you and ask them to change their ways. It is a long shot but well worth a try.

If you are a father (or mother) who is failing his family in some manner, yet you still are adored by your children, don’t think your inattentiveness or failures won’t come back to you somehow, someway. I know my dad suffered from great guilt, he told me so, but that just gave him another excuse to drink. Get professional help, if you need it, before you lose the closeness, love, or support of your family. Take advantage of the time that your loved ones’ hearts are giving you, and turn yourself around. If you don’t, their brains will catch up someday, and then it will be too late – for you and your family!



14 Comments
Leigh link
4/29/2014 04:37:43 am

Wow. What an emotionally raw account of your personal journey. This post is beautifully written. The love, the heartache, the deep disappointment shine through. Thank you for this honest look at how you've been affected by alcoholism and an absent father.

Reply
Mike Smith link
4/29/2014 12:28:52 pm

Thank you for reading and commenting Leigh. I hope it helps someone!

Reply
Vickie clubb
4/29/2014 05:00:48 am

Great article. This will help lots of people whether alcoholism or other problems. It speaks to all families in some way. Advice for all of us.

Reply
Mike Smith link
4/29/2014 12:35:49 pm

Thanks Vickie! You're right. Thank goodness those I love have given me time to mend my mistakes!

Reply
test link
4/29/2014 08:08:43 pm

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Reply
April
4/30/2014 08:23:32 pm

This is an excellent post. Thank you for sharing your story in an effort to help others.

Reply
Mike Smith link
5/1/2014 03:10:12 am

Thanks April! We all need to share so we know we are not alone in the troubles each and every family has to deal with. Maybe a solution can be found in our stories.

Reply
PBR
5/1/2014 02:03:49 am

Thanks for opening your heart and mind to tell us all your stories -- especially this one -- in hopes to help, or motivate, or influence someone else about the choices they make or the consequences of their choices. Your story touched my heart! If it helps one person or gives one father, mother, son or daughter, brother or sister the strength and courage to make changes in their life, whether it is to stop drinking, using drugs, leave an abusive/addictive relationship, or the very difficult challenge of detaching with love because your loved one will not change, I'm behind you. Our children deserve our presence, our attention, our love, our guidance, and encouragement -- you make a difference with your words and your actions. Thank you for trusting us (your readers) with your emotional life stories.

Reply
Mike Smith link
5/1/2014 03:01:12 am

Beautifully written comments PBR! I think that sharing my story takes some of the pain away by hopefully preventing its recurrence in someone else's life. Thanks so much for writing!!

Reply
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Danielle Lincoln Hanna link
1/16/2016 02:57:49 am

Beautiful.

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Mike link
1/16/2016 03:03:58 am

Thank you SO much Danielle!

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