I don't get to see my dad and sister often, owing to the fact that I'm about seven hours' drive away from them. I see them twice a year, at Memorial Day and Christmas, and Christmas is a bad time for my dad since my mom died at that time.
I'm very different than my dad and sister, having collected a few college degrees along the way and having a larger vocabulary (I can't help it, Lisa, I like using the right words). And the fact that I'm an extrovert, and I couldn't tell if they were listening to me because I wouldn't get much of an answer. It was hard to be around them, then.
But now, I get an inkling of who they are when I come visit. I am reminded of the family I came from, full of compassion and anger banked into sarcasm. The family whose fortunes turned sour when a fifteen-year-old Gerald Leach chose the farm rather than the foundry which now makes most of the garbage truck hoppers in the United States. The descendants of both Michel Cadotte (the spelling varies) and Iksewewe. Child of a man who served in the army and became a pacifist. A family that accepts me without marveling at me, which makes me happier than could anything.
Thanks, Dad and Lisa. I had a wonderful time.
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