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#father's love
kuroshika · 1 year
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"a daughter should not have to beg her father for a relationship." rupi kaur.
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unbfacts · 10 months
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axiseart · 10 months
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His broken son, found lost at sea.
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chaserofthemoonmaker · 5 months
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Happy Christmas, Dad.
If you were here, I know you wouldn't let this happen. Kaluguran mu la reng anak mu keni at ali mu la paburen ma-agrabyadu.
But you're not here anymore.
And we are being set aside.
"Kayo nalang mag adjust," they would say.
And you are not here.
Oh the melancholia...
Yet one thing I've truly realized:
Your love for us is indeed immeasurable. Your love for us, the lost souls.
Missing you badly, Papang.
3 December 2023 - 10:27 - Office
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ceruleanblueshells · 6 months
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If my father knows your name, you are my closest friend. If he gets it right on first trial ,you're my best friend. You've really done something to win my love. I don't make the rules.
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marrylona · 1 year
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ISIAH 64:4 (KJV)
For since the beginning of the world men have not heard, nor perceived by the ear, neither hath the eye seen, O God, beside thee, what he hath prepared for him that waiteth for him.
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patox-world · 10 months
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bayisdying · 1 year
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To Dad, From Lucky
A/N: Valentine's Day isn't just for lovers, this blurb idea hit me like a train yesterday. It was quite emotional for me to write, and I hope that translates well.
Tagging my babes: @dragon-kazansky @gracespicybradshaw @mrsjaderogers @cycbaby @askmarinaandothers @callsignscupcake @callmemana @kloofspeaks @notyoursbutlewis @milesdickpic @callsignthirsty @likelyrowdy @starlit-epiphany
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-----
Baylie was frustrated to say the least, it was Valentine's Day and she didn't want to give all her classmates a card. Most of them are mean to her. She had Katie's written out already and she didn't know why she had to do anymore.
"You look deep in thought there pumpkin." William said to his little girl.
"Why do I have to give everyone a card for Valentine's Day?"
"Because it's the nice thing to do."
"What if I don't wanna be nice?"
William tries hard not to laugh, "you are a nice girl though, remember?"
Baylie thought it over, and slowly nodded.
"What if I help you fill the others out?"
"Okay daddy."
His heart melted a little, he could never get tired of her calling him that. He would move mountains for his little girl, DNA be damned. William never pictured having kids, but here he was at seven in the morning helping his daughter with Valentines. They had the cards filled out in no time, and it was off to school for the kiddo.
"I'll see you later at your party pumpkin." He yelled out as she ran to the doors of the school.
True to his word, around one o'clock he was in her classroom that was decorated in cute little hearts. He nibbled on a heart shaped sugar cookie and drank punch out of a tiny heart shaped cup.
Cards were passed out, candy was consumed, and soon it was dismissal time.
"Wait, Daddy, I have something for you!" Baylie exclaimed. She went into her desk and pulled out a handmade card, and handed it to him.
On the front were 3 stick figures, labeled Mommy, Daddy, Baylie. Inside said "I love you Daddy." With a big, roughly drawn heart.
To: Dad
From: Baylie
He didn't cry easy, but damn if he didn't sniffle a little.
"I love it pumpkin." He said when he was sure his voice wouldn't betray him.
She hugs him tight.
"I love you too Daddy!"
They walk out of the school hand in hand.
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When William died, Lucky never imagined another man would fill the Dad-sized hole he had left in her heart. Until Ice came along.
The first time she had accidentally called Ice "Dad" she had walked away and cried. She felt like she had betrayed William by doing so.
She calls her Mom, tells her what she did. She expects tears, anger, anything. What she gets is comforting words and warmth. She is told William would be happy she found someone she trusts with that name. She is told to not cry, that it's alright.
It takes her awhile to warm up to the idea, afraid of hurting feelings, even her own.
She finds the old Valentine's card she handed William all those years ago in her memory box. Time has faded it, but the heart is there and so is the little stick family.
She gets an idea, and rushes to the store. It's last minute she knows, especially as she fights the crowd of people who also waited until the last minute. She finds a card that fits his personality and hopes he will appreciate the humor.
She knocks on his office door.
"Come in."
"Hey Ice!"
"Hey Lucky, it's good to see you." He smiles brightly at her.
"I got you something." She says, the card behind her back.
"You didn't have to do that."
"Oh but I did." She hands him the card.
To: Dad
From: Lucky
Ice doesn't speak for a moment, gathering his thoughts. He gets up and hugs the girl tight.
"I love it Lucky."
"I love you too, Dad."
It doesn't hurt rolling off her tongue, like it was meant for him to get that title.
Two extraordinary men, and she's the lucky one that gets to love them both at very different times of her life. ❤️
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A/N: no I'm not crying, you are.
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criergrace · 2 years
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i could never be angry at my dad because when i look at him i see me. in his eyes, in his manners. he destroy my family's energy every single day and im still the one who cares about him. im my father's daughter.
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danimason2019 · 10 months
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How I Found of the Love of my Life Holiday Specials- Father's Day 2023
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artsycoolfuzzycat · 10 months
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Happy Father's Day. To all that have and all that are big brothers or have lost love ones . My heart goes out.
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parking-space · 2 years
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Best screen hug ever, at about 1:29:00
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pelicandensity · 2 years
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My Father Comes Home to Me
I carry my father
within my heart
in my words
my actions
in all that
he taught me
his wisdom
his love
there was
a time
early
in my life
when I
rebelled
against the idea
that I was
just like my father
I was too young
to take it as
a compliment
a beautiful
gift which
fathers give
their sons
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paincorner · 1 year
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Having kids doesn't make you a father.
Raising them does.
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Opinions on the term “daddy-daughter date”
On reddit, I’ve come across some comments who said they disliked the term daddy-daughter date because it makes sound romantic, it makes it sound incestuous 
Personally, I think those people are way overthinking it. It’s not meant to be romantic or that he’s literally treating her like a girlfriend. It’s just something cute, for goodness sake 
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pegiolo · 2 years
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If you ever find yourself drowning, be sure your gonna drink enough water
// Word Count // : 1,845
//...//
Creative Non-fiction(ish), Based on Crime, Speculative.
Warnings : None really.....????
Son x Father kind of relationship going on...Nothing sus...
“You need to sleep.”
I stare at my son. A cold, gray, metal table sits between us. Its presence is large and undeniable. The corner of it pushes lightly against me, reminding me that it is there. That it has always been there, even when we couldn’t see it. An impermeable, unnatural solidness that has always kept us at a distance from each other.
“It’s hard to sleep.” He stares back at me and it’s like looking at my reflection in a funhouse mirror. He looks like me, if you stretched pieces of me this way and that, in all of the wrong directions. “There’s a lot of screaming.”
“Well, just do your best.” I say, like it is his first semester at college and he is struggling with the transition. I peer down the length of the table at him, and try to imagine some alternate version of my son sitting there. All of the could-have-beens start swirling around in my head. He could have been a student. He could have been a surgeon. He could have been a father. He could have been a friend. Instead, he became a murderer. All of the elements mixed together in all of the wrong ways. Maybe his body didn’t produce enough serotonin. Maybe I was just a terrible father.
No. My brain fights back. I provided for him. I gave him a huge home, warm meals, and an education. He had neighborhood friends, a puppy, and space to play.
But sons are not pets. Maybe I fed him three times a day and took him outside for walks, but we rarely played catch and I almost never patted him on the head to say, “Good Boy.” Maybe I had not given him the emotional tools to give and receive love properly.
No. My brain pushes back. Plenty of kids grow up without parents at all and they don’t start killing people because of it. He was just born this way.
I lean forward and the corner of the table pokes me. I wince.
“They keep the lights on all the time.” He says.
“Well, try to sleep.”
“Ok.” He says.
“Are you eating enough?” I ask.
Looking at him now, I can see hints of it. The darkness they talk about on the news whenever they flash his picture. It’s there, under his eyes, deep and purple. It’s in his hair, messy, long, and unkempt. It’s in the way he keeps his arms glued to his side, perpetually uncomfortable in his own skin, perhaps trying to keep the evil from leaping out. It’s in the unimpressed way he appraises the world around him. In the cold, dead, stare that looks through you. It’s in the thoughts behind his eyes that he preferred to dwell in rather than create a beautiful life to actually live in. This darkness has shoved itself deep inside his very essence, ripped apart every little piece of him that could have been salvageable, and now there is nothing left but a shell.
“The food is bad here.” He says.
“It is?” I say.
The table is smaller in size now, and I can see him, smaller now too, refusing to eat broccoli as a little boy, unless he was promised a Hershey bar after. There are other images too. My son skipping around in the backyard with the family dog nipping at his feet. Trick or treating with the neighborhood friend. Grinning as he held his first caught fish high up in the air. Flashes of smiles, of happiness, of life. The light had been there. I know it had. Where was it now?
“The cat’s doing fine.” I say now, to the little boy, as the table shrinks and I get closer to the version of my son I used to know. If I reached out, I might be able to touch his tiny, innocent face. “She always wants to be brushed.”
The table is almost gone now. And there he is before me, brushing the cat. Her tail raised high, tickling his nose. Her orange fur rubbing against his cheek, begging for more love. A smile from him, as he looks up at me with amusement. I think of that smile now. Had it been real? Had it reached his eyes? What hadn’t I noticed? Were any of my memories real, or did I only see what I wanted to see?
Our hearts had been whole once. Hadn’t they?
My son says nothing. His eyes say nothing. His body says nothing. He is still as ever, giving up no indication that he even misses the idea of the cat. Had he ever loved the cat, or did he just know that he was supposed to love the cat, that he was supposed to pet the cat, and smile at the cat? Aren’t animals supposed to sense when there is something off in a person? How had we all been so easily fooled, even the goddamned cat?
“You know how she likes that.” I press on, trying to hold on to what little happy mental pictures I have, but its edges are burning, licking at my fingertips. Just like the son that sits before me, even the memories of him as a little child are tainted by his actions. Almost every memory is insidious in hindsight.
“Yeah.” Is all he says.
“She’s always trying to be brushed.” I keep going, almost panicky as the table begins to grow again. My fingers are burning now. I have to stop it. I have to get rid of the table before it gets rid of me.
“Remember how you used to do it?” I say, so loud that the guard at the door shifts on his feet, startled.
My son blinks at me. Does he not remember? Was that someone else? Where did my little boy go? Who is this man sitting before me? My hands are completely on fire now. I drop the memory of my son and the cat and trade it for a new one. My mother and my son, planting roses in her garden.
“The roses look good.” I shout at him. “The ones that you planted.” I grip the edge of the table as it pushes against me. Its coolness runs up my fingers and through my body. I begin to quiver.
As my son was planting seeds in the garden, seeds of evil were being sowed in his head. Was he dreaming up his next moves while rowing the dirt? Was he discussing scripture with my mother while ripping his morals to shreds in the dead of night? Was he attending AA meetings just to put on a show, while he was emptying bottle after bottle alone in his apartment?
“That’s good.”
“The yellow ones and the red ones.” I try to resurrect the boy I used to know with this pleasant memory. It doesn’t work. He may have never existed. He blinks at me, bored. My chair squeaks against the floor as an invisible force pushes me further and further away from him. My son is still frozen in place. Maybe he likes the table. Maybe he put the table there. Maybe we both did.
“I don’t know what to say.” He says finally, and the table screeches to a halt.
“I don’t either.” I sigh in relief.
This is perhaps the only truthful thing he has ever said.
“I really screwed up this time.”
“Yes, you did.” I grapple for more.
“I really blew it.”
“Well, you can still be treated.” I say, forever hopeful. “I didn’t really realize how sick you were.”
Squeeaaaak.
The chair is moving again. My son stares at me, as if he doesn’t see the state of panic he has caused.
“You need help.” I jump out of my seat.
“I guess.” He says, unbothered.
“We just need to make sure you get some help.”
My back suddenly hits the wall with a thud. The edge of the table presses firmly against my stomach. My heart starts to race as the air is pushed out of my lungs. I am trapped now, by my son's actions. By my failures. By my refusal to accept that maybe he is as bad as the news says. That maybe he really did do those things.
My son watches as I try to fight the table off, but he does nothing to stop it. His essence takes on a new shape, right before my eyes. His arms are resting on his legs now, his body no longer rigid. He is comfortable, now that he is in control. Everything about him is dark, dark, dark. His once light blue eyes grow deeper, like the bottom of the ocean floor, a place nobody will ever reach. And he is stuck there. He has never tried to swim to the surface. The drowning is normal to him. If you have never so much as glimpsed how beautiful life can be above the surface, how do you even know you want to swim to it?
He finally moves, just the tiniest bit, that it almost goes unnoticed. A tapping motion, from his pointer finger against his thigh, over and over.
“You know, mental help.” I have completely surrendered to the forces of the table now. It pushes me up the wall so that I am hanging in the air, feet just barely touching the floor.
Tap, tap, tap.
“With professionals.”
Tap, tap, tap, tap, tap.
“People who can help you.”
Tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap.
“Maybe you can get better.”
Silence, now. We stare at each other. I look down at him, suspended in the air, helpless. He looks up at me, chained to the bottom of the ocean floor, helpless.
“How’s Grandma?” He asks. He pushes his hands back to his sides, and the darkness retreats back to its hiding place inside him. The table releases me, and my feet plop to the ground. I can breathe again.
“Fine.” I wipe my hands down my shirt, attempting to press the wrinkles out.
“Good.”
“She sends her love.” I sit down, regathering myself.
“Good.”
The guard shuffles his feet, walks over to my son and motions for him to get up. Our time together has ended. Heat rushes to my face, as I am ashamed to be glad it is over. The guard leads him to the door.
“Make sure to drink enough water.” I say, pretending that proper hydration could ease the pain of living a life trapped in the deepest depths of an unexplored ocean. “You need to drink more water.” I stress, thinking that maybe drinking the very water that is drowning him might take some of the pressure off.
“Ok.” He nods, pretending too. Pretending as he always has. “See you, Dad.”
“See you, Jeff.”
In light of the recent Netflix series, this is based off a conversation between Lionel Dahmer and his son, Jeffrey Dahmer. *Most* of the dialogue is real, pulled from Lionel's book, “A Father’s Story.” Everything else is inferred.
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