At dinner Thursday night, I saw a man walking into the restaurant who looked a lot like my father. I had the same reaction I’ve had for the last eight years. Every time I saw someone who looked like him, I thought he had found me and was coming to confront me.
It took me a couple of moments to remember that it couldn’t be my father this time — because my father was dead and cremated.
I suspect it’s going to take a long time for me to accept that he’s dead and that he can’t show up at some unexpected moment to scold me or tell me I’ve done something wrong.

It took me years to feel the anger I’d repressed since childhood
Coming soon: Meet John Crispin, Demopublican for U.S. president
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We’re more like other animals than we like to admit to anyone
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I choose love over hate, because the author of the story’s not done
Nelson Mandela overcame anger at oppression to become a hero