Anonymous wrote:Just simply - Dad, I've moved on with my life but I want to be very clear on two points that we will likely never see eye to eye on:
1) You were a horrible and selfish human being to leave your daughters for a new woman and child. You deserved everything I said and more now that I truly understand being a Mom myself.
2) You are still completely myopic on this subject. Why in the world would you send this to my Mom? I am glad to have some record of who you are despite disagreeing with your whitewashing events. But Mom? She does not need this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would write that chapter from your perspective OP. Not to send it to him or anything, just to append it to the book for your kid.
This. Keep the book and your response and give it to your child later.
As for your dad - when he asks if you’ve read the memoir yet, say no. Later you can tell him you misplaced it. Read the first page and fell asleep. Dropped coffee on it. Whatever. Don’t engage and don’t compliment him for it.
I must have misplaced it. Send me another copy of you have time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would write that chapter from your perspective OP. Not to send it to him or anything, just to append it to the book for your kid.
This. And then offer it to some newspaper as an opinion column or publish it yourself on social media. Sounds like your father is famous enough that he wrote a memoir and expects people to buy it. Put all the dirt down and have at it. You can entitle it "A child's view of my pompous dad's {name} life choices". The only thing that takes such people down a peg or two is if OTHER people actually get to know the real them, not the picture-perfect polished version that they've built of themselves for so long.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This has been so validating. Thanks to every one of you. It's so uncomfortable to feel this affected by those long-ago events. I'm now the mom of a middle schooler and we have so much going on in our lives that requires my full attention...revisiting those dark chapters was unexpected and unwelcome. As we know, DCUM consensus is rare, but a consensus that my Dad's crappy book is in fact, crappy, really helps.
Another here. Your dad's crappy book is, in fact, supremely crappy. Who writes a memoir if they are Joe Nobody?
You can burn it in a bonfire (snap a pic for him) or put in a stack of "outside toilet paper for camping" (snap a pic for him) or put it in a "bin of books nobody wants; not even the library" and snap a pic of the recycle guys picking it up. Make a photobook!
Anonymous wrote:Lots of people write memories. It's a good idea. Maybe not for publishing but we are losing our family history and ties. There are memoir classes even in our town. They all aren't narcissists. It's just a way of trying to remember stories from your life that you can pass down to family members.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would write that chapter from your perspective OP. Not to send it to him or anything, just to append it to the book for your kid.
This. Keep the book and your response and give it to your child later.
As for your dad - when he asks if you’ve read the memoir yet, say no. Later you can tell him you misplaced it. Read the first page and fell asleep. Dropped coffee on it. Whatever. Don’t engage and don’t compliment him for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would write that chapter from your perspective OP. Not to send it to him or anything, just to append it to the book for your kid.
This. Keep the book and your response pop and give it to your child later.
As for your dad - when he asks if you’ve read the memoir yet, say no. Later you can tell him you misplaced it. Read the first page and fell asleep. Dropped coffee on it. Whatever. Don’t engage and don’t compliment him for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He sounds like a narcissist.
Totally. Thinks so highly of himself that he wrote a memoir!? Pathetic. Just a typical man who wants to feel that his time on earth was full of importance and purpose and wants his story to be set into history in a way that keeps him squarely as the hero of his own story. I'm sorry your father let you down and was such a unprincipled person. They fact that he's desperate for you to read "his book" and is surely waiting for compliments and accolades makes me sick on your behalf, OP. The lack of self awareness is breathtaking. I say you write him a letter where you express your disappointment in how he glossed over how he single-handedly unraveled your life and tell him you don't want talk about his book. Don't give him the attention and validation he seeks. Garbage. I'm sorry, OP.
Anonymous wrote:I would write that chapter from your perspective OP. Not to send it to him or anything, just to append it to the book for your kid.