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The Father Factor: The Official Blog of National Fatherhood Initiative

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What Remains After a Father Leaves

  
  
  

This is a guest post by Lori E. Allan. Lori's poem, "Absence" won first place in the Dudley Randall poetry competition at the University of Detroit Mercy. The poem talks about the struggle and disappointment that comes with the absence of a father. Below is the story behind the poem, followed by the first-place poem. You can find Lori here and here. If you are interested in guest blogging for us, send an email.

emptyframesmedium resized 600Many people deal with the absence of their father differently. My parents got divorced when I was four and that was the last time my father was around and was in contact with my siblings and I. My mother was so strong so I never thought of the separation as a bad thing. We were okay. I held on to God and sought him out for guidance, provision, and truth. Surprisingly, it never really hit me until I got older. There are certain things in life that a father should be there for. I was accomplishing so much and doing so well in my endeavors. I was eager to know how much more knowledgeable I would be if my father was around. I made so many decisions based on what I thought a father figure would want me to do and it got me pretty far, but I was missing out on the tangibility of a father.

Most of the people I went to school with in Detroit didn’t have a father around either and it was obvious. People cling to different things to fill that void without knowing it and it’s scary. I definitely saw that things would be easier on my mother if she had someone to raise us with. A father to be there financially, emotionally, and just someone strong to go through life with would have been amazing for her and she deserved it. I do understand that things didn’t work out and he wasn’t the right guy, but I have a hard time understanding how someone wouldn’t want to be the right guy. I co-taught a first grade class and they brought me so much joy! I couldn’t fathom how someone would ever want to miss out on everything you can learn from a child.

The fact that I am becoming the woman God wants me to be and that I am coming out of this situation the way that I am amazes me. I knew that I was in a very vulnerable position as a woman growing up without a father. It made me very cautious when dating. I had a pretty good idea of how I should be treated, but I needed an example from a father. It is so important for a guy to see the relationship you have with your father. I used my relationship with my Heavenly Father to fill that and I wasn’t always a good steward in my relationship with God. God has heard, “you aren’t enough” from me plenty of times. But in the end, He really was and has been. He’s been there through everything: scraped knees, graduations, sick days, performances, and heartbreaks. He’ll be there when I get married and when I have a child one day.

I have no hard feeling towards my dad. I realized that you can’t make someone be a father and everyone isn’t cut out to be one. Who knows, maybe things are better this way. I just really hope that wherever he is, he’s a man and he’s growing. Not for me, but for himself. Though God has done far more than I could ever ask think or imagine, it would have never hurt to have two fathers. My relationship with God is a special one and I couldn’t have asked for a better father.

My poem, "Absence" won first place in the Dudley Randall poetry competition at the University of Detroit Mercy. The poem talks about the struggle and disappointment that comes with the absence of a father. It isn’t about anger; it is about unanswered questions and voids that will linger on. A father will always be thought about and he will always be needed. His absence is more present than anything else in the whole world.  

Absence 
by Lori E. Allan

Empty in the photos
is the shape of a man
who has left a void
of himself.

The strength of his arms
lifted the glass
apart from the frame
as he climbed out of the situation.

Behind the bars,
I am confined within
the seventy-two percent
of African-American children raised
in single-parent homes.

Struggle is the only thing
that shows up
in the house we live in,
the food we eat,
the look in my mother’s eyes.

Despite the chasm,
I can still hear the way he says my name.
He had a photographer’s urge
to stop and capture a moment
and never developed the photo.

The void is tangible;
I hold it in my hands
and wonder if there is
a significant difference
between who I am
and who I could have been
because of what he could have been—
a father.

I house his vacancy in a cautious frame,
passing it by when I have what I need
and climbing inside when I see that I don’t.

It is a black and white photo
that I see in color.
In his absence,
I see it all. 

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photo credit: Viewminder

Comments

hi! your poem is very touching.we often wonder how good our life would have been if we had that one thing which we don't have. However, in reality we don't know,if that ONE thing if it was really in our life,,,may be our life would have been miserable or may be then at some point we would have been asking god to take back that ONE thing.  
There are so many fathers who don't know how to be the father you crave for. The emotions you have described portrait an idle father but trust me 1000s have fathers who are as good as not there either physically or emotionally or even financially. lucky r those who have fathers present in all three areas of life while growing up..and its a very rare breed just as u r very rare to have a special relationship with god :)
Posted @ Saturday, February 16, 2013 2:14 AM by nupur
I understand what you all are saying. 
 
In my case, my father was able to be around as much as he wanted, he just never did. And I can't answer why.
Posted @ Saturday, February 16, 2013 7:01 PM by Lori
yes, there is a great emphasis that fathers are the role models, maybe to the point that mensa is now womensa. my favorite 'motherhood' story would be of the child that was born without ears. when the young girl had become a teenager her mother literally gave her ears to the daughter so she could have a normal life. the mother then went on to grow her hair long, keeping esteem and dignity. 
c.m
Posted @ Tuesday, February 19, 2013 6:58 AM by cecil marton
A well written article, and a thought provoking poem. I do believe that there's a BAD side that our fathering has shown. Similarly there is a BAD side to our mothering. Thie difference will obviously be that we see a less abusive, confusing and violent nature on our children when mothers are involved. The question become 'how can we turn this tide?'. Personally and from my interaction with the young generation, I believe its best that we present the best possible balance in the upbringing of the children. Pointing fingers will not help. I have always heard that children are better off with their mother, I am not dispiting that mothers are the best a child need, this can be proven a million times....BUT, have we proven that children are worse off with their fathers be yond reasonable doubt...when does the situation get worse, is it when the meet their future partners? ...what's wrong with this picture...in my opinion there's a lot of forces at work and bot Men and Women play a role in messing up our children.
Posted @ Friday, February 22, 2013 4:27 AM by Meshack Kekana
I believe that parenting is raising children and when there is a sole parent, only a mother/ grandmother can provide nurturing, with the help of the community.
Posted @ Monday, February 25, 2013 7:18 AM by cecil marton
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