daddy mythology
born into the mouth of Africa, raised on real mango. crashed from a treetop crooked and spent months mechanically stretching his legs back out. friends with Momodou. British education. aborted A levels. drove to the city with his civic engineer father, a black car?
his mother described once the black car and his father leaning on it, dashing. likely in a gray suit, hair smooth. the gestalt swallows the boy who becomes my own father. washes of sand, topaz, tiger’s eye wavering with heat, like the first dream I remember.
in that, we each ride on elephants, my own family. there’s no story. nothing happens. I cannot imagine him unshielded to the world, going to school every day. eating someone else’s cooking. a little brother. I spend so much time worrying I have forgotten something of my own childhood, but here is the real amnesia. in one image, he is Poseidon in olive trunks, a wet black curl and black prickled jaw. lifting a baby from the bay.
for example, I never knew him before the white cell of hair centered above his forehead. for example, he has no middle name. for example, I imagined him a supervillain when I peeked at his work e-mails and he snapped. some satyr in a glade.
can you imagine, my mother said, when I met him he ate cereal. when he totaled the car he didn’t tell me for months. he didn’t tell me at all, I walked out and saw its smashed eyes. he is easily hurt, and like me, he thinks strangers dislike him. Atlanta is nice, he says. I didn’t finish that semester, he says, because I couldn’t do it. how do you want your eggs, he asks.
11 thoughts on "daddy mythology"
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Awfully good. The content is compelling, the form intriguing—you’re looking at your father sideways, to see him better. One suggestion: consider omitting the attribution in the last sentence. We know who’s speaking.
Good point! I was struggling massively with the ending…
terrific
we’re all building mythology of who we are and who we come from, yours is especially compelling and creative
Obsessed
Oh man, this is incredible, exciting and so relatable! My mother grew up in Haiti and she always said “Real Mangoes” as well!
I’m hooked to read more of this memoir. love the word “topaz” and the title
Wow, this is so sensuous and loaded with specifics. Part of a memoir? And did you really ride elephants? I’d love to hear more about that.
Haha I wish I had ridden an elephant. That was the first dream I remember having as a child. And no, not part of a memoir, but the comments are certainly inspiring me to expand!
This is gorgeous – the hazy, whimsy of a dream, the concrete details of a memoir, the voice of a daughter who will give you for-examples all day long. Love reading your work again.
A care-ful portrait, love “lifting a baby from the bay.”
This is wonderful!