Wednesday, January 06, 2010

Overload

I’ve had a lot going on lately that I’m still trying to process. A LOT. Some of it is funny. Some of it isn’t. Some of it I will need some input on. I think I’ll start on one of those topics here.

I think I may have found my sister (part 1)

Those of you who know me well know I’m an only child. Those of you who know me REALLY well and have been paying attention know that I do have a half-sister from my father’s first marriage. She’s 11 years older than I am, and she’s deaf. I’ve never met her, and we have no idea where she is. Every few years I go looking for her online.

I think I may have found her on Facebook and also on Classmates.com, with pictures. Everything matches up. Everything. Age, middle name, red hair, she’s deaf, she’s even in the right state. It’s got to be her, but I still have that shadow of doubt sitting there. I need to confirm a birthdate and then I’ll know for sure.

I haven’t contacted her. I’m not going to, at least not for now. I know that she knows where my/our father is and she hasn’t contacted him. That tells me she doesn’t want to. I can respect that, I have no idea what she knows or was told about dad. That’s a can of worms I’m not sure I want to open just yet.

She’s got two kids. Do you know how strange it is to think that I might have nieces and/or nephews? That’s always been something other people have had, never me. Because I don’t have siblings. But I do have a sibling. But not really. It’s so complicated.

It is a very very strange feeling. All evening the day I found the pictures I would be working on something and the thought would flutter through my mind

I may have found my sister.

And I’d stop for a second and blink. And then continue with whatever it was I was doing. And then I’d be walking down the stairs and there it would be again

I think I’ve found my sister.

And I’d shake my head a bit and move on.

And the pictures. I look at the two pictures and originally I thought: “Nah. She doesn’t look anything like me, or my dad.” And then I’d look again, at the tilt of the head and the smile and remember the pictures that I have of me that look just like that. But still really different. I likened it to looking at two faces and then seeing a candlestick.

Part 2: the not so great part

So, when I was growing up, the topic of the half-sister was taboo. We didn’t talk about it. Questions weren’t acceptable. It was a non-topic. My mother did tell me a few things. Dad? Never.

So, imagine my surprise when, last week when we had an influx of (dad’s) family coming north for a funeral that my closest-in-age cousin told me that dad had talked TO THEM about it while they were visiting. Not only does dad know where she is, he talks to her.

So he tells my cousin all about it….but not me. WTF??? I’m. Really. Not. Happy. I really don’t know what to think. I was shocked.

Matt and I have talked about it and, knowing what we know of my control-freak dad, we decided that there were two reasons we can see him doing this:

1) by him being the only one in contact with her, he controls what she knows about him/us. If I were in contact with her, who knows what I might tell her?

2) this forces me to ask him, which puts him in a position of power/control. I’m betting he guessed my cousin would bring it up to me. He also has a habit of underestimating me on a regular basis, so I’ll bet he thought I wouldn’t be able to find her myself.

I’m pretty angry. The fact that my mother hasn’t told me about this also upsets me.

I’ll open the floor to discussion now. Thoughts? Opinions?

6 comments:

Angie said...

What a mess. My advice would be to approach the situation slowly and methodically. Don't bring the matter up with your father (yet, if ever), and reflect on how and if you want to go about your investigation.

In our face-to-face conversation, you had strong reservations about initiating contact with your half-sister through electronic means (and rightly so). Do you have a physical address? If you spend time in your parents' home, do you know where such an address might be stored? Can you research it if you know your sister's town of residence?

Step gently. This is a thorny situation.

Jody M said...

Yes, I am NOT planning on contacting the woman anytime soon. I don't have a physical address that I can count on (when I did a search I found several). I'm sure dad has it somewhere, but it's probably on his computer.

Me voici ∞ Here I am said...

I know you have long wondered about this step-sister. I think it is worth pursuing and meeting her eventually. It could be the best thing that happened to you. And if it isn't then you will know that at least you tried and found some resolution.

Plus, you could start a relationship with her and leave your father out of it for the time-being - letters, email etc... getting to know each other and your lives without talking about him. Similar worries may plague her as they do you concerning your father.

Who knows one day one of you might need a kidney...

Have you considered the possibility that your father is, for some reason, so ashamed of whatever it is, that he is trying to cover up something bigger by keeping you apart? Not a pretty thought, mind, but possible.


I can empathise with your situation a bit. I think I told you I have a 5th nephew, one I don't know, but do. Steve actually has a son, but he gave up rights to him.

As far as I know, the boy doesn't know Steve or his other family at all at the control-freakdom of the step-father. Oh, did I mention he lives in the same town as me and graduated last year from the school I work at? I even had him in class but couldn't say anything... and every time I looked at him, I could see lots of varied family resemblances....

So yeah. Weird.

Jody M said...

I have conisdered the 'shame' option. One of the things that Matt has suggested is that there are things that happened before I was born that I probably don't want to hear. I have considered that, too.

Mama Pea said...

Wow. I'd bet dollars to donuts that your half-sister has been having almost identical thoughts to yours. (Depending, of course, on what your control-freak dad may [or may not] have told her.)

Our relationships with our parents are so weird because of the fact that they are our parents. That in itself carries so much baggage, good and bad.

Sounds like you'll never be able to deal with your dad on a rational, reasonable basis until HE changes. (Fat chance?)

I think you'll know when the time is right to make further contact with your half-sister. Don't push it. If it's meant to happen, it will. Trust in that. But I think I would emotionally and physically keep your dad out of the equation. (Easy to say, hard to do, I know.) Having him as an active third party in the (possible) relationship would only poison things from the get-go.

If and when you and she make contact, it should be as two people who sincerely want to form a relationship for your own personal benefit. Involving your dad (other than the two of you communicating about him/the situation) would change the whole potential.

Although it can be terribly hurtful to you as his child, try to remember that he's handling the situation in the way that is the least painful for him. (That doesn't make it "right.") You can't change him but you can choose to be happy with the good person YOU are.

I hope this all works out. You (like all of us) deserve to be happy and not be carrying the hurtful feelings.

Me voici ∞ Here I am said...

I second what mama pea has to say.