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Hey diary, guess who’s back and all grown up.
I met Dad today.
I wish I could close this book right here, full stop, but that would be lying by omission. And I’ve lied to myself too many times already.
I thought about not even reading his letter, letting the fantasy stay intact — that maybe he had mellowed with age, maybe absence had made his heart grow kinder, maybe he could see me the way I have fought so hard to see myself. But fantasy doesn’t survive contact with reality.
He didn’t recognize me at all. Just a random woman at the bar drinking her favorite cocktail. It took me a good moment to realize he was actually hitting on me. I gotta say, that’s both disgusting and validating at the same time.
When I told him who I was, his face contorted in palpable disgust. Like I’d spilled something foul across his drink. He said he didn’t have a daughter. He said it… my dead name. As if he was carving it into me. Over and over. With a dagger.
I told him the truth. That I was his daughter, that I’d been living as a woman for three years, that surgery was on the horizon. I said it all as plain as breath. He sneered at me, accused me of playing dress-up, of being a predator, of humiliating him with some “sick joke.”
And then he dismissed me. Not like a child being sent away, but like a stranger being ejected.
“Go away.”
“Leave me alone.”
“I don’t have a daughter.”
That was the last thing he gave me. Not recognition. Not even anger worth keeping. Just erasure.
I walked out of that bar feeling like I was 2 years old again — unseen, unheard, forgotten. Except now I’m grown, and I know what he took from me. What he refused to give.
It’s strange. I thought rejection would feel like death. Instead it feels like gravity. Heavy, constant, unavoidable. I carry it now. But I am still standing. I am still Helen.
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Comments
Bigotry
Rarely fades with absence. This is a tale worth remembering for far too many of us.
It's funny, you could be born deformed or with a nasty birthmark and your parent would still love you, but being TG is seen as an unimaginable sin.
Appreciate the comment
Yeah. I felt the need to end on a bitter sweet note. Knowing what the reader does about Allen, it was a logical step. And I had been sitting on this page for 5 years.
all around asshole
what's he doing hitting on a girl young enough to be his daughter, anyway.
Right?
I wanted it to be a complete shock that he didn’t recognize her. It has been 20 years. And I also wanted it to add to his creep vibe. He’s a shut down recluse who lost everything.
Dad stinks, it feels bad...
But I hope you don't stay where he wanted to leave you. You've done me a favor by sharing your story.
Hugs, Jessie C
Jessica Connors
Fitting end.
I always felt that Helen’s diary was a somber story with comedic gallows humor interspersed throughout. The conclusion follows logically. At least she didn’t follow through on her bus threat.
Words do hurt
I remember school playground time and telling my mother. She gave me that old saw; 'sticks and stones may break my bones but words will never hurt me'. I know she didn't mean to lie to me, but WORDS DO HURT. It is us who have learn not to let the words stay in our head, however hard that may be.
>>> Kay
Literally
I remember when I got picked on that my tormentors upon hearing me say words will never hurt me. They pelted me with text books, sometimes my own. Best not to give them ideas.
In all seriousness though, when you’ve had a good day, and you’ve let your guard down, it hits harder. This ending was to show Helen’s growth.