‘In preserving the story of what I experience, I live doubly; the past will return to me, the future is always there’– Eugène Delacroix, 1824
This summer I am looking for my father. Things have happened – things are always happening, but this is different – and I know time is running out. If I do not do this now, all that I will be able to say is I wish, I wish, I wish.
My father is not missing, and neither am I estranged from him. We have maintained a good relationship over the years: I do not remember any arguments. When I was a child, if my mother wanted my father to do something – put out the garbage bins, clean the pool, fix a leak in the roof – she would send me to tell him. More than once I asked why I had to do it; couldn’t she speak to him herself? ‘I’m asking you, Nigel, because you don’t annoy him.’ So, obediently, off I went to pass on the message. I have told friends that I know what sort of old man I will be because I have been following my father’s life. ‘In forty years, I’ll be him.’ With that they nod and smile, a little alarmed.
Yes, my father and I are similar people, so what exactly am I trying to find? Perhaps I am not trying to find anything; I want to interact with him in a deeper way, to better understand him, to experience the way he lives in the world, to know him – before it is too late.
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Keep reading here.
Thank you to the Tuggeranong Arts Centre, which commissioned this essay to accompany Jack, John and Kempsey, an exhibition of my father’s work, held from 6 February to 27 March 2021, ACT, Australia.
8 comments
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February 7, 2021 at 9:16+00:00Feb
whisperinggums
A beautiful essay, Nigel, the more so because we said goodbye to my 100-year-old father yesterday, and already I am thinking of the things I don’t know, didn’t ask.
(BTW I see an old NFSA envelope in one of the pics behind the text!)
How is your Dad? It looks like the opening went well. I really hope he enjoyed it and felt feted.
February 7, 2021 at 9:16+00:00Feb
Nigel Featherstone
Hi Sue, I saw the news about your father and read your beautifully affectionate post about him. What a wonderful long life, and so very well lived and loved. The qualities that you identified were so very moving. Thank you for still taking the time to engage with my essay about my father – as ever, I appreciate and value your thoughts and comments. All best wishes as you navigate the coming weeks and months. (And good spotting the NFSA envelope. I’ll have to ask him what all that’s about!)
February 7, 2021 at 9:16+00:00Feb
whisperinggums
Thanks Nigel … I think your essay was just right for today as we just sit quietly recouping our energies a bit. (Do ask him about the envelope).
February 7, 2021 at 9:16+00:00Feb
Nigel Featherstone
All the very very best for your recouping. And I’ll be sure to report back (if I’m able to get some good intel)x
February 7, 2021 at 9:16+00:00Feb
amandacurtin
Beautiful, Nigel. A gift, indeed, from each of you. x
February 7, 2021 at 9:16+00:00Feb
Nigel Featherstone
Oh, Amanda, thank you so much – for your reading, and for your letting me know. I’m so glad it resonated with you x
February 8, 2021 at 9:16+00:00Feb
Jim KABLE
Nigel: I’ve been searching for my father – consciously I mean – for over 60 years now. He was killed in a car accident – a passenger – I was just two. Who might I have been/become – question driving me from my primary school days – having been served an unfair hand in the step-father stakes! You – and indeed Sue – in the nicest way of course – I envy…
February 8, 2021 at 9:16+00:00Feb
Nigel Featherstone
Oh, Jim, that is heart-breaking. Writing the essay, and receiving a wide range of comments, including yours, has made me grateful for the duration of my father’s life, and for how he’s lived. It’s also made me more sensitive to those who’ve had very different experiences. Thanks so much for letting me know yours. All best wishes to you.