Month: May 2020

for as long as i can remember

i’ve never been open to my parents.  i have very vague memories of happier times when we all lived in milpitas together.  my dad was working and thriving, my mom took care of us and sewed us clothes, we were young enough to still be and feel oblivious to my parents’ marital problems – or they were still happier then, still in the phase of trying to work out their issues before everything fell apart.  i don’t remember telling my mom things back then, but i remember having happy times with her other than when it came to disciplining us about school work.  i learned how to ride my bike in the backyard at that house.

then we moved to sunnyvale where things started to go downhill.  i’m not sure for what reason although i largely suspect it was financial.  the reason i think this is that we used to own the milpitas home and we moved to a rental in sunnyvale.  so that’s where things started to slowly unravel.

i feel like my parents have a lot to hide, not that i don’t.  but the foundation that we grew up on was one where adults treated children like innocent little bunnies that needed to be protected from everything in order to control and mold us.  in particular when it came to themselves and their weaknesses and even their love. vietnamese guilt and saving face culture do not play well into all this.

although putting all this aside, other than from photographs where my dad is holding me and looks happy and looks like he loves me when i was a toddler, i don’t actually remember a time that i was my dad’s daughter and i felt close to him.  i get moments here and there when i say bye to him after a visit of which we largely don’t speak and are not even in the same room.  he cares, but at some point started disconnecting from us.  at first i thought it was due to vietnamese culture, where male and females roles are very defined.  but i see vietnamese dads with their kids and this isn’t the  case.  there are many vietnamese fathers who adore their daughters and have close, loving relationships with them.

then i thought, it’s me.  i’m not that proper vietnamese, christian daughter he wants  –   he can’t relate to me because he is consumed with religion and i am indifferent to it.  but i think what’s wrong with my dad’s approach to christianity is that he is too concerned about how you should live it that he misses the point of it.  he misses the point that jesus loved people, he tells you to love others as yourself, but my dad’s pursuit of religion actually makes him resent us and perhaps even my mom.  it makes him distance himself indirectly.  but then it turns me off from that religion because to me, it doesn’t seem to work – especially in the case of my dad.  someone who spent all his life studying and believing in it, but he actually doesn’t understand the action of how to love someone. he just knows he should in his heart, hiding behind the veil of a concept that isn’t executed.

but today, i am starting to realize, it’s not me – it’s him.  and that’s scary, because there are things i can do to change the environment, there are things i can do to change me even, but there is nothing i can do to change him.

i’m running out of time and this covid thing has not helped.  i’m particularly worried about my mom.  my dad at least has some sort of motivation in his life – god.  he also has the ability to abuse alcohol.  my mom has him and us and no substance to abuse.  he’s not around mentally and we’re not around physically. with my mom, i’m barely there mentally.  i know there was a time when it was just me and her and it must have been the most wonderful of times – a strong young mother with her toddler.  trying to make it in america with each other.  she always tells the story about how when she was walking home from the bus with me and dropped all her money, $100 that was supposed to be all our food money.  she ended up eating instant noodles that month.  maybe that’s why i like them so much.  i think it’s a wonderful story, i really wished i remembered those times with my mom. i truly admire my mom for what she’s gone through.

but instead what i practically remember is an angry, middle-aged woman.  sad and bitter, scared of everything. illogical. taking things out on her kids because she didn’t know how else to cope.  never expressing feelings to us or helping us understand why she was like that.  she probably also just didn’t know.  but is it okay to expect more from your mom?  or is she just somebody’s daughter?  i don’t want to feel mad at her anymore.  i want to be able to casually and hysterically laugh in front of her.  i want to be able to tell her when i’m sad.  so i guess unlike my dad though, part of the problem with my mom IS me.  which is something i can try to fix.  maybe she’ll meet me half way if we can help her get there because i still think the problem is largely her. maybe not.  will digest the rest of this later.  all i know is i don’t want to remember my mom as a sad and lonely old lady who could not get past her past.

7+ hrs

Sounds weird, but I’ve been touching things more lately. It all started with meditation, Sam Harris said to touch our fingertips and keep moving them in little circles so you are constantly aware of the feeling.  I did so with my fingers for a while then moved onto softly scratching my fingers, hands, moving up my arms. It felt amazingly visceral.  Uncomfortable, but good, like you’re pushing the edge.  Wooden bed, the anthro carpet – so many textures in life we choose to not be aware of.

Yesterday, from 4pm and on, I was in the house and no one paid any attention to me.  I did a lot of thinking and felt very alone even though I live with people – then I felt trapped and claustrophobic.  This is actually what quarantine would make me realize, I have been trying to avoid this feeling but deep down knew it was coming.  But a combination of Billie Eilish songs (hostage, i love you, everything I wanted) and Woody Allen’s memoir have plunged me into some sort of withdrawal.  I felt lonely and started putting up defense mechanisms which then translated to me being cold toward E, but I couldn’t tell him that was why – it’s hard to express such nuances.  Instead it actually ended up translating to “usually I put up with this ish but I’m not in the mood so I’m not going to anymore.”

Reading Apropros of Nothing makes me feel like I should write and it’s okay to be into the random things I’m into even though I’m currently not an expert in any of them, maybe it’ll all come together some day, some how.  He keeps saying he’s not a genius, neither am I.  But he is knowledgeable and I am not – don’t read enough.  The old cliches of work hard and be passionate about what you’re doing resonate more when it comes from him, I feel like my grandpa is teaching me through telling me his life story.  Something my parents don’t do (deeply)*, I’ve never had this sort of figure in my life.  It also gives me a sense of everything great comes from so many other things and the artist had so many things going on for him and in him that we don’t know or realize – it’s actually pretty insightful.  I always thought autobiographies would be boring.  Things just don’t appear from thin air which has generally been my approach of wanting to be instantly good at anything that I do – kind of definitely a dumb and arrogant expectation.

*Vietnamese culture just has too much hiding of negative things in it and they have had pretty hard lives that I’m sure are hard to talk about

 

morning thoughts

last night, I

  • took a bath
  • watched michelle obama’s doc, becoming – kind of a nice positive spin on America
  • and then lay in bed for 5+ hours listening to billie eillish songs (had to look up how to use the word “lay” properly here)
  • then listened to the same 3 songs for another good 1 or so trying to go to sleep, wallowing in faux emo-ness
  • then I read woody allen’s memoir, which made me feel better, it was like watching one of his movies

some things i thought about while laying in bed:

  • i forget a lot of things but there are two memories that always seem to come back to me:
    • the day I told P in the car that R was coming back and that I am going to be friends with him.  that I had my own derived values around friendship and that I wasn’t going to give up on it.  What an a-hole thing to do.  Can’t imagine how it made P feel to hear this from someone who had cheated on him, that he still had to be around because of his child and business, and someone he was clearly not over and confused about.  The reason I remember it is in that moment, I felt so “right,” and in a way so “righteous” because I was standing up for my convoluted morals – a set of false algorithms that I created so I could do what I personally wanted to.  sh*tty.
    • 2nd is when I was in the hospital after having C and P was laying on the bed next to me, singing “Goodnight Angel” and then later when I came out and he was the one standing in the “waiting room” to greet me, I’m sure we hugged for a long time.  Our lives kind of played out like a coming-of-age romcom at the time, complete with sweet, acoustic sound track and all.  But I was too stupid to realize how valuable he was, why’d I have to be that character?  Usually it’s the guy, isn’t it?!   Anyway, our story still has a happy ending, but I wish I didn’t have to so bad about parts of it for the rest of my life.  Albeit, we all deserve what we get.  #juno

C recently told me she is crazy, little does she know how cray her mother was.

thoughts on Mother’s day

C and I have been communicating a lot more, which is nice. Now that we’re both older (more so me than her) it seems like I can just relate to her better.  This same sort of thing happened with Mai and all my sisters since we are so far apart in age.

Looking back, it was hard being young and trying to act like an adult to someone else.  I tried for a while (particularly up until C was in 1st grade), but at some point I think I gave up and mentally ran away – partially under the guise of “kids never listen to their parents anyway” and “I have no control over the situation”  – but that was just me turning to my favorite defense mechanism (DENIAL!) again.

Thinking of how my mom has influenced me, I know that it is untrue.  You don’t realize it until you get to know your parents better that you are a very good reflection of parts of them.

Luckily, P was there to be C’s rock in her early years and I (at the very least) imparted what I thought were my best traits on her.  P thanked me today for “taking care of the important stuff like relationships and school” but I feel like we’re just tag teaming.

Him being present for her childhood meant that I had the luxury of living out the rest of mine when we were 18, something I feel extremely lucky, selfish, and guilty about.  I’m so glad he’s found B and can start to explore the world again. It’s his turn to play, although I’m not sure he quite knows how. : P