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Aundi Kolber

Aundi Kolber

June 18, 2015 ·

When Father’s Day Hurts

Uncategorized

It’s been 8 years now.

Father’s Day didn’t used to hold a lot of weight for me, just another Hallmark holiday really, but it’s been 8 years since my dad chose not to be in my life. The most defining moment came when he wasn’t at my wedding.

My brother walked me down the rose covered aisle, and I fought like a warrior for joy as Pachabel Cannon in D filled our ears. God showed up in that old church and gave me greater peace than I have ever known before or since. We took our vows and I could feel the presence of every guest that supported us on that muggy June night. And as the reception wore on, I rested with the beautiful joy of the life before me. My husband held my hand and candle light danced on my skin, but even then I allowed a small seat for grief too. 

I have gone back and forth on when and how and if I would ever publicly tell this story. As I have wrestled, I always come back to the belief that maybe someone else needs to hear about this pain and shame. There are parts to this story that I can’t share, because frankly, not all of it’s mine. But I’ve decided, I want to share the parts I own.

                                                                         ***

Sometimes in life, you are the one who is different.

Maybe you have waited for years to meet a spouse or the pregnancy test is always negative or your marriage feels impossible. Maybe you have a life that should make you happy, but you feel shame that it doesn’t. It can hurt when the things people glorify all around don’t connect for you. Having a healthy relationship with a dad can be like that, lots of people have it and when you don’t, the pain is searing. 

That’s what it felt like, when I realized he really wasn’t coming to my wedding; when I realized he didn’t want to be part of my life.

It felt like grief I’ve never known, a ripping in my internal identity. I felt like every time he said he loved me it was a lie. It caused me to question every true thing in my life.

And when he sent the abusive letters to me and the incoherent voicemails, demanding back things given as gifts; I questioned reality and mostly blamed myself. I slowly owned the identity that it must be my fault. 

Because why else would a father blame their children and family for all their hurt and toxic choices? 

And so the critics in my head began their mantra on repeat: I am bad. I am at fault. If I were a better daughter, a better Christian—whatever– this wouldn’t be happening.

There was a time I couldn’t answer the phone or walk to the mail box without my full fight/flight/freeze mechanism going off. Much of my childhood like that too, so many out of control fights between my parents, and my response just below red alert. 

Initially, my husband didn’t understand how I could be so triggered. I tried to explain it, but really how do you explain a feeling that is so visceral you can cut it with a knife? You just feel it, as your nervous system seems to explode; there isn’t any rationalizing it.

                                                                               ***

Little by little, days to months to years, I have begun to heal. Relational trauma is real and I have learned that it is okay to honor that truth. With distance, boundaries, counsel and personal growth I have begun to take off the identity that I am at fault for his decisions.

It wasn’t my fault that he made choices that hurt our family.

It wasn’t my fault that his lifestyle was more important that my siblings and I. 

It wasn’t my fault that he chose not to be at my wedding.

It’s not my fault.

The reason I know that I’m healing is that I feel love toward him again. My first instinct is no longer fear.

These days I look back with empathy at the little girl, and now woman, who has walked a road that marked me for life. I look back at her questions and her fears and I think; of course you feel that.

Of course that hurt.

Of course it caused you to question every love that you have experienced in your life, including your heavenly Father.

Now we are coming up on Father’s Day again, and as I sift through the wounds of my relationship with my dad I still feel grief. But I approach it from the posture as one who is fully loved by a Father who is more complete and good than I could have imagined.

I do not and will not carry the shame of another. I have given myself permission to be loved and loveable and to be imperfect. 

I think I like it.

                                                                        ***

This story is far from over and it’s even now being written, but I hope and pray that if someone reads this account and has experienced this grief, please know you are not alone.

As we walk this messy and sometimes uncomfortable road to healing I am encouraged to know that embracing our grief and pain often opens doors to redemption. Whatever your story, I pray you find courage to allow yourself to be loved.

“For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”  Romans 8:38-39

Linking up this week at: Empty Plate. Full Heart

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Stacey Philpot says

    June 18, 2015 at 3:15 pm

    Tears. Such beauty and bravery. Thank you for sharing your heart and story.

    • Andrea Kolber says

      June 19, 2015 at 1:36 am

      Thank you Stacey. You are such an encouragement to me and I appreciate you so much.

  2. Danielle Kurek says

    June 18, 2015 at 4:41 pm

    Thank you.. I needed that. I needed to remember that I’m not at fault for others decisions, that in my grief and pain redemption and beauty can and will be found.

    • Andrea Kolber says

      June 19, 2015 at 1:36 am

      Oh I am so glad this speaks to your heart. It can be so hard to let go of that feeling of responsibility for others. Blessings to you on your journey, Danielle.

  3. Jenniemarie says

    June 19, 2015 at 5:34 pm

    Thank you for sharing. You. Are. Not. Alone. I truly believe when we share our stories not only do we continue to heal but we give strength to others as well.

    • Andrea Kolber says

      June 21, 2015 at 6:41 pm

      Jenniemarie, it is my honor to share this with you. Thank you for the reminder that we never walk this alone.

Hello, my dears…it has been a long while since I Hello, my dears…it has been a long while since I’ve been here and I’m peeking my head in to say hi. I’ve been taking some extended time off of social media and it’s has been helpful, needed, and clarifying—though I miss connecting with you all here.
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A few months ago, I shared that I’m troubled by much of IG’s current framework (more on that in stories.) Sooo I’m working to change how I show up here and I think some of that will mean that parts of my public work will be other places. I don’t have all of it figured out yet, but I hope you’ll stay tuned and I will be sure to share more as I have it available. Either way, thanks for being here. I hope you’re taking care of yourself, using your voice and influence in the ways that you’re able. May we all have what we need to heal anyway. 🫶🏻
#TrySofter #TakeWhatYouNeed #HealAnyway #StronglikeWater
Thinking about this as we end the week: It can be Thinking about this as we end the week: It can be so disorienting and disturbing when you’ve experienced abuse or oppression that is targeted at making you question your reality.
🌿
So frequently in this kind of situation we learn to mistrust ourselves as a way to make sense of what is happening; even if our perceptions are indeed accurate. 
🌿
Often, at least part of the repair to this kind of experience starts with being fully seen & validated in the presence of someone else’s compassionate, attuned attention. This safety allows us to rebuild our internal templates— at whatever pace we’re able—so that we can ultimately come to believe ourselves (again or for the first time) & and live more and more from our true God-given self. #TrySofter #StronglikeWater #TakeWhatYouNeed
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Need more resources + insight? Follow along at @aundikolber or check out my books, “Try Softer,” “Strong like Water,” and “Take What You Need” (links in profile 💛)
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*alt text in post*
Today is Ash Wednesday in the Christian tradition, Today is Ash Wednesday in the Christian tradition, and though there are many different significant insights from this day and the whole Lenten season—one important element I’m thinking about today is this: 
We are not machines. 
We are not objects. 
We are not check lists.
We are not commodities. 
We are not projects. 
We are not drive through windows.
We are not trash receptacles. 
We are fragile, resilient, and oh, so, Beloved humans that will someday be dust. But even then, we will be sacred dust.
🌿
In a time where dehumanizing rhetoric seems to rule the day, particularly towards those who have already been the most marginalized—may our finite humanity be an invitation to remember how we want to live & move in the world. #TrySofter #CompassionateAttention #StronglikeWater #TakeWhatYouNeed #LoveYourNeighborASYourself
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*alt text included in post*
So much of trauma takes away choice, and so it mat So much of trauma takes away choice, and so it matters deeply that the language we use in healing reflects empowerment and repair.
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Through the years, I have worked to find words that help translate an invitational, survivor centered, trauma informed ethos into language. I am certainly not perfect, and in many ways that’s the point, isn’t it? All of us are in process and I think that—as we are able—staying connected to that humility allows us to stay open to growing & working toward loving our neighbor *as* ourselves.
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Tonight I was thinking about the many phrases that have reminded me of this open posture—and I was inspired to write down a few. (I have loved seeing this poetry format floating around the internet—kuddos to the originator 🙏🏻)
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📙Needing more resources & insight? I’d be honored if you check out my newest offering that released just two weeks ago: “Take What You Need: Soft Words for Hard Days” (link in profile 🌻) #TakeWhatYouNeed #TrySofter #StronglikeWater
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*Alt text included in post*
Today is my 42nd birthday—and I’ll tell you wh Today is my 42nd birthday—and I’ll tell you what, I feel deeply grateful to be alive. What a privilege it is to grow older. This last year was hard in ways I haven’t been able to fully share, but I think someday I will. But here’s what I noticed in myself this last year: more so than ever before I have learned to trust the voice God has given me & the wisdom placed within me.
🌿
A significant portion of the trauma & particularly narcissistic abuse I experienced in my life has been targeted at causing me to disbelieve my own reality, experience, strength, and integrity. It caused me so much suffering not to know if I could believe myself. It has been the hardest work of my life to choose—again and again—to be on my own damn team. To know God is already waiting for me to see how loved I am; to see the people who choose me; to see the Goodness already present around me; to embody what I have devoted my life to teaching, speaking, and writing about.
🌿
Thank you for being here; my heart is full. #TrySofter #TakeWhatYouNeed #StronglikeWater #cptsd #narcissticabuse #healanyway
There will come a time when I’ll be ready to ful There will come a time when I’ll be ready to fully unpack the bittersweet goodness & honor of being back on the Oregon coast this last week. But for today, I sense my body & spirit need a bit more time to fully digest all that happened.
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In the meantime I’ll say this, the quote I shared from Francis Weller reminds me of what I felt for so much of my trip; the necessary partnership of grief & aliveness. They are inextricably linked and a vital part of our God given humanity. In so many respects healing will always involve grieving because it’s part of the mechanism that allows us to metabolize pain. Often I think of the verses that remind us that Jesus was acquainted with grief; a man of sorrows—and it heartens me in my own deep work and what Francis Weller calls an “apprenticeship with sorrow.” 
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Each of my siblings, my mom, and even my nieces and nephews have their own story, but all of us have had to walk our own journeys of grief, repair, and ultimately—gratefully—aliveness. I’m so proud of this little family of mine and thankful for these sweet moments where we’ve been able to both celebrate and grieve as we walk the path. And it’s not lost on me how much this kind of work matters, especially in a world that seeks to desensitize us to suffering and the humanity around us. May we each have what we need for our own “apprenticeship with sorrow,” because the world needs our aliveness. #TakeWhatYouNeed #TrySofter #StronglikeWater
If it feels like a resource, then I hope you take If it feels like a resource, then I hope you take what you need ✌🏻
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(I’m mostly offline this week as I’m in Oregon for a bit, visiting my family & my old stomping grounds. Grateful to be here 💛🌊) 
#TakeWhatYouNeed #TrySofter #StronglikeWater
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📔 Needing more resources & insight? Check out my newest offering: “Take What You Need: Soft Words for Hard Days”—a contemplative coffee table book designed to make my previous writings as accessible as possible (link in profile💛)
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IC: Your softness will always feel like a threat to folks who want your heart hard + half alive.
I hope you stay soft anyway.
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