Never Broken: Songs Are Only Half the Story (40 page)

BOOK: Never Broken: Songs Are Only Half the Story
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I read a study by a group of psychologists who wanted to understand why some children who have faced hardship have such emotional resilience. The study revealed a surprising answer: the kids who were resilient
knew their “oscillating family narrative.” This meant they knew the good and the bad. Not only where grandma went to school or grandpa’s favorite hobby, not just the accomplishments, but the darker moments as well. They came from families who did not keep secrets, and knowing that there are ups and downs that people face over time gave the children a sense of security. They would also have ups and downs, and that was okay. There was an overall arc that kept climbing onward. Honesty and transparency were key to emotional resilience.

As I write this, I am proud to say my dad and I have come a long way in healing our relationship. A lot of this is due to my dad’s determination to find his own health and happiness. While I took my own path to find happiness and healing, my dad spent years dedicated to healing his own wounds and trauma. We have had moments where he was able to not only communicate his regret and ownership for his shortcomings as a father when I was younger, but he has shown me with his actions that he has made real changes. He comes to my house and stays with us for months, and he is easy to have around. There is no tension. When he needs something, he lets me know clearly. There is nothing passive-aggressive. If I hurt him, he will tell me. If he hurts me, I will tell him, and we know we are both responsible enough to sit and listen, and we make amends. He allows me to be myself and he is encouraging of me as a mom and a person. He tells me he is proud of me and articulates why. He thinks I am a thoughtful parent, and he is very proud of the changes I have made to ensure I don’t repeat the patterns I was raised with. Often he puts a hand on my shoulder and with a tear in his eye says, “Jewel, I’m so amazed and so proud of who you have become despite what you had to work with. I admire you, honey.” I can’t tell you how good this feels.

He and I spend a lot of time talking about the past, about our journey and our healing. I was surprised to find out that when he married Nedra,
she made him feel a lot like she made me feel—as if he didn’t know very much and that she was an all-wise, all-spiritual person. He was so scared and empty from his childhood that he was thankful to meet someone like her and was happy to let her tell him what should be done.

I admire my father. While I wish he had been able to intervene earlier, I think it takes more courage to face these things after you have displayed years of abusive behavior. The shame and the hurt and the guilt make it nearly impossible to face up to. Making amends takes tremendous vulnerability, but it takes accountability to earn back a relationship that was lost. Words can be said easily, but one can’t fake actions. My dad and I are a loving father and daughter. We may not be what other fathers and daughters are, but what we have is real and safe and he shows up with honesty and I am thankful for it. I thank my dad for letting me tell my story uninhibited. When I told him about the book I was going to write, he said, “Jewel, this was your life. The things I did affected you and you have a right to talk about them.” He is willing to be seen on every step of his journey. This takes courage. I like to think of my dad as his true self now—I think as a child he was a gold statue covered in wounds and abuse, under layers of mud and crud. I feel I am getting to know who my dad really is and who he was meant to be.

One of the things my dad said he struggled the most with over the years in regard to my public life was learning that I was living in my car. People asked him how on earth he could let his child be homeless. I did not know this had been hard for him. At the time, I never did call family to tell them what was going on. When I moved out at fifteen, I just never looked back. It’s not that I thought that if I went back to Alaska, my dad would not give me shelter. He would have. I just never thought about it or thought to call. My dad knew I had been living with my mom in San Diego. I think I called him to say I was going to live in my car, but other than that I never called home when times got hard. He
told me recently that his own feelings of inadequacy made him feel unqualified to parent, especially from far away, and so he never called or checked in either.

I am thankful my dad has done the work it takes to live a different life. He has been sober for many years now and works hard at being honest with himself and others about his feelings and fears instead of lashing out to protect himself from them. I am astounded my son gets to have a relationship with him, and it warms my heart to see Kase get to know my dad as a loving and patient grandparent.

I am proud and thankful my dad stopped the generational cycle of abuse while he was alive. He was able to find tenderness and honesty with his kids sooner than his own father did. My dad found it before he was on his deathbed. I’m proud to have looked at these things and broken the cycle before I had my child. I hope Kase will be able to live a life always knowing his own worth and that he will avoid the traps that took me until I was forty to find my way out of.

My life, so far, has been about examining what worked in my childhood, keeping the good while being willing to see and let go of the bad. I wrote a song I call “The Family Tree.” I sang it for my dad, and afterward we both cried and hugged each other. We’re both warriors of the loneliest battlefield—the one that is contained within our own flesh. Both seekers of truth. I am proud of my life. I am thankful for the gifts both my parents gave me. I was made into a curious, creative, thoughtful person. The rest I give back. It never belonged to me anyway.

The Family Tree
Mama, I see your face now
In the mirror, it’s getting clearer
Daddy, all those things I said I wouldn’t do
I’ve been drawn to, ’cause I looked up to you
And I’ve loved you through this tangled legacy
Tracing the twisted roots of our family tree
I stayed strong like you did
I moved on like you did
And I wound up tough as stone like you did
If I don’t learn to bend, I know I’m going to break
Like you did
Lover, I must forgive you
I confused you with what I couldn’t see
Inside of me dark things pulling
Not evolving, made a puppet out of me
And you came with your own history
Both caught in the branches of our family tree
I stayed strong like you did
I moved on like you did
I wound up all alone like you did
If I don’t learn to bend, I know I’m gonna break
Just like you did
I love you but I need to look at who we’ve been
Take the fruit but choose the seeds I scatter on the wind
That’s the job of the kid, to do better than our parents did
So I’ll stay strong like you did
And I’ll move on like you did
But I won’t hide from the truth like you did
I’m learning to bend so I don’t break
And you can bet I’ll teach my kid that love will always find its way
just like you did

TO MY SON

long night of the dark soul
what once nurtured me
I must turn from now
yet leave the most tender part of me
behind
half of the time
child
I know you will read this one day
I know you will have questions
I know you will love that which I turn from
dearly as he is a part of you
and so I fear my turning from him
will make you feel as if I turned from
a part of you
as well
this drops me to my knees
even now as I write this
tears sting my eyes
and my lungs turn to iron
too full of sadness to breathe
it breaks my heart
to think you may ever
feel rejected in any part
by my decision
to separate from your father
I want you to love him
as he loves you
so deeply
so undeniably
but what he and I have created
aside from you
has turned from growth
to not merely stagnation
but the opposite of growth
we are reverting
and it is damaging to us both
and compromises us each
to the point I fear it may
compromise you
and so it is with love
that we turn from each other
it is with love for each other
and love for you
though it is hard for me
at this time to feel anything
but sadness for the pain
I fear I inflict on you
I have a hard time forgiving myself
for not seeing things sooner
for not being more perfect
as to figure this out
without leaving
but I suppose
I need to look at myself with the same
kindness I will look at you
when you are older
and you are learning
to form and reform yourself
I must be gentle with myself here for
I never knew love before you
how could I be touched
by something I knew not of in the past?
but loving you has showed me
how to love myself
and in this way your gift is twofold
in my life
loving you has echoed back
and bathes my own love
over me
I love myself enough to leave
I love myself enough to make sure
I am the kind of woman I want you to know
this has set a healing process in motion
it is literally as if
the future washed over the past
to change it forever
and then ripples into the more distant
future
of our family legacy to heal it as well
in ways I cannot foresee yet
but sense
the way an animal senses shelter
is near
it is not about perfection
it’s not about withholding love until
we feel we have earned it
and arrived at perfection
it’s about loving ourselves
in the process of becoming
what we want ourselves to be
it is a work in progress
it is a sculpture
that is not wrestled from stone
immaculately overnight
but the labor of a lifetime
and with hope
we are given a pencil to draw
scratchy lines
and with confidence our family gives us
we find courage to make bold ones
and with self-love
we are given the eraser needed
to scratch out and redraw a more accurate shape
we should not be so bound by shame
that we cannot renegotiate
or reimagine
our selves
we cannot be so bound
by the vision of others
that our own true shape
becomes obscured
. . .
I want to imagine myself boldly
I always wanted to
but you inspire me
even now
at two and a half
to be the best version
of myself I can be

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