He makes me feel like I am like none-other, but not in a respectable manner. I remember his eyes, lifeless and dark. His smile had a revengeful look upon it, his canine teeth set in his mouth as if her were a vampire. His heart was cold and full of hate. I remember some of the memories as if they were yesterday. His words would cut me through me faster and deeper then any scalpel could. He smelled of cigarettes and coffee on a daily basis, but tried to always cover the smell with the horrendous Brut cologne. It seems cliché but all I remember is all the bad, none of the good. I remember the late night fights. All I did was sit in the corner of my plain room. Staring at my plain room that only consisted of a dresser that stood up to my chest, and a twin size squeaky bed. My covers were pink and right above and to the left of the bed, in the corner of the ceiling draped a net filled with my stuffed animals. I would sit and think, trying to drown out the screaming. The words of hate were thrown like daggers from dad to mom. I remember hearing the thundering of mom going down the stairs, but it was not by her own will. I remember hearing the screams of “I hate you” being yelled at dad, and the yelling of “You cheated, and you were caught, just admit to it damn it!” I remember when we moved for the second time, the fighting progressively got worse. My mom gave my dad chances to come clean, and to be sorry, but the day where he would say “I am sorry” never came. My dad left July 4th, 2005 while I was away in New York and it wasn’t until I arrived that my parents told my brother and I that they were going to get a divorce. We were in my dinning room, my chair faced the bookshelf walls, to which I would spend all of dinner time staring at the picture of my grandfather’s picture. We ate meatloaf and mashed potatoes, and corn and green beans. The meatloaf hat tomato paste drooping on top, with sliced onions backed into the paste, the potatoes had sour cream in them to make them smooth. The corn lightly dusted with black pepper setting in a buttery sauce, while the green beans were simple and out of the can.
To begin, the food we eat can trigger our thoughts and memories of the times we had with our loved ones. Whether one is smelling burgers at a family barbeque, eating a feast during the holidays, or biting into that hot, homemade cookie, one’s senses are awakened when one smells or taste food, and it brings one back to the fond memories of the times we have family. I will be discussing my personal memories and how I identify with the father in the story,”Chili Cheese Dogs My Father And Me”, by Pat Conroy.
I’ve never heard of any childhood quite like yours. I was shocked by the personality and character of your parents and how they raised you and your sibilings, “The Glass Castle”. I understand why people call your parents monsters. I will admit that the thought crossed my own mind on multiple occasions. However, I have also never read a book or a memoir that required so much thinking . With every page I read I was able to learn about the struggles & hardships you dealt with as a child and I tried to see a deeper meaning. When I did that, I saw your parent’s intentions behind everything they did. I began to understand what you saw and still see in your parents.
My father was a very fair man, and I can well recall all this time later that he concurrently consoled and chastised me, but openly chastised himself for being very cavalier in creating the circumstances that led to the fracas!
When I was younger my dad used to drink alcohol.Never when he had kids did he use drugs but alcohol he did.It impacted me as a child because I remember watching him drink with family members in the backyard.While me and brothers and sisters played with cousins.I also remember him drinking him to much one day and I woke in middle of the night and he was in the restroom sleeping on the floor.My first reaction wasn’t to wake him up to go to his bed, but to instead bring him a pillow for him to sleep on.When I saw my dad in the restroom that night he had been throwing up in the bathroom.As for a child that is very close with his father it made me sad to him on the floor.Too me he looked lifeless for a odd reason I guess because he just looked
I can barely recall my childhood, one of the few things I can remember about it were the sounds of arguing and quarrels that went on between my parents. At that time, the words didn't seem to make sense but I was old enough to figure out that something was wrong and they were unhappy with each other. I often noticed my father sleeping outside his bedroom, on the couch. It
Four years ago I lost a very special person in my life from cancer. My grandpa's death had a huge impact on my life along with my other family members. My grandpa was my biggest fan and probably the Wisconsin Badger's as well. Every game I could look into the stands and he would be there. Since he has passed, before every basketball game I think of him saying "Shoot a couple 3's for me tonight". I used this as an inspiration to do my best in every play of the game. My grandpa helped me set personal goals such as making fifty three's in a season, which I accomplished my last game of my junior year.
Growing up with an alcoholic dad is one of the hardest things I have been through the second is going through puberty with a dad who had cancer. My dad was not a bad man at all he was considerate and smart, but he was also sick in all meanings of the word. In a way my dad transferred one disease for another, meaning once he got cancer he was no longer an alcoholic. Due to my father's chronic illness I was left to taking on responsibilities at home at a very young age and leaving my day filled with school, a job, and taking care of the family while my mom worked. Due to this hectic schedule it left my very little time to focus on school and activities, during the year my dad was the worst ,my junior year, I received my first F and my attendance
That something that compelled me was the grace of God. He told me that he was done with work in a few hours and if I wasn’t busy, that we should go to dinner. We spoke for a few hours and everything I said, I was sincere about. I wished him well and we parted ways. He never asked for my forgiveness that day, he was just a recipient.
Figuring out what made you is a hard thing to accomplish Is it a mixture of your mother’s intuition and your father 's stubbornness? Or is it the fact that you have his nose and her smile? Or is that distant look in your eye you got from your grandmother? To include education into this age old question brings up another. Who had the biggest impact on my life, the one who made me decide that continuing my education was worth it. I would have to say it would have to be my father, a man who believed he could make me into the child he wasn’t. My father Blake Christopher Thomas has had the biggest impact on my life in both positive and negative ways. He is the reason I decided to continue my education at San Francisco State University.
I have not had any contact with my Father since I was around 2 years old. I was notified of his death when I was 15 years old and did not really have any emotion to it as I had no emotional connection to him. Carlton Scott Quinn’s absence from my life did not have any effect on me in my opinion, although having no close male role-model did. I do not think that he himself would have brought positivity into my life growing up and would have had a strained relationship with my mother which no one needs.
I remember thinking my life would be like a Disney movie, but it was just my mom and I. I always wanted a father I knew I had, I just didn't know why he wasn't around. My grandmother held me once as a child as I cried begging her to let me find him, “He doesn’t know where I am Granma… I need to tell him.” I whimpered.
I remember when my best friend died the only person that I trusted. Danny was thinking about him when I opened up the door my mom said “Danny come eat you know when to come home!” Danny rush to the dinner table .I saw something in front of the window a man like figure in then the window shattered and the man was gone what was that Danny’s
“I love you.I love you too.” Those are the words I will hear my parents say to each other every morning. Up until my seventh grade year , my life was pretty close to perfection. My parents would wake my sister up for school. We would wake up early in the morning to pray as a family.After prayer, my Mom will make breakfast. My Dad would gather my sister and I to set the table , then we would eat as a family and day would get started. Dad would go off and drive to work. My Mom would drop my sister and I at school then she would go off to work. Everything slowly started to change once I got to middle school. My Dad didn’t start coming home to till really late. I never really went to sleep. Occasionally, I would look out my
As usual I woke up to the sound of my father pounding on my bedroom door, hollering, “Get up! Get on your feet! You’re burning daylight!” I met my brother in the hallway, and we took our time making it down the stairs, still waking up from last night’s sleep. As we made our way to the kitchen, I thought about what to have for breakfast: fried eggs, pancakes, an omelet, or maybe just some cereal. I started to get hungry. As usual, mom and dad were waiting in the kitchen. Mom was ready to cook whatever we could all agree on, and dad was sitting at the table watching the news. The conversation went as usual, “Good morning.” “How are you today?”
It was around 2:00pm and it was time to open presents. I started with opening friend’s presents then I opened families. I was finally done opening all my presents. I looked around at all the people, who were looking at me and my dad was nowhere to be. That was the only present that I was looking forward too. The party ended and my dad didn’t show up, my little four years old hopes were in the ground, it was like I could feel my heart ripping appart. I looked at my mom and she mouthed I’m sorry, my faced turned rosy red and my eyes filled with tears. From that moment on my life was never the same. It was a dark cloudy day and I was going to see my dad. We were playing the game Sorry and he was winning. I was the yellow player and he was the green player, he was laughing and smiling the whole time. I wouldn’t have wanted to spend my Friday afternoon any other way. When the game was over he asked me to clean up the game while he went out to smoke a cig. When he entered the room and the game wasn’t picked up, he went crazy. His eyes seemed to turn a dark almost black color. It was like he was a completely different person when he came back