Early morning thoughts

I woke up missing my dad. He wasn’t in the main part of the dream, it was about me being a kid and growing up with the bikers and vets, a lot of mishmash of my childhood, but at the end there was a knock at the door, and I remember as an adult going to the door excited that he was there (somehow I knew it was my dad). Just as I opened the door, I woke up.

He passed away on 2/11/16, and I guess I have some sort of daddy issues when I say there is something that still feels torn when he left.

That being said, this morning after I woke up I felt sad, but not just about him. I found myself worried about about two dozen guys (and gals), and thinking about a group of Vietnam vets and bikers.

Only picture of dad on his way to Vietnam 1965 where he would be on PBRs in the dual 50 cal pit (aka Apocalypse Now)

Oh friendly warning, Contrary to what you see on tv/movies, they did not like a lot of photos of the group, primarily I assume FBI/police but also I think they may talk tough, they weren’t fond of who they ended up being, they didn’t see themselves like I saw them. They did take a lot of photos me me though, so you get stuck with those.

Then I realized the biggest part of the sadness is that when I pass on, in probably 20ish years, everything they shared with me will pass on from their world.

I grew up surrounded by hardened Vietnam vet bikers (1% Outlaw MC). I lived day to day as a child through all of their problems. Taking care of them when they were low, and being taken care of by them when they weren’t.

Dad, prime MC time in 1984

Nowadays I see the same groups keep their kids out and don’t seem as close. I’m sure some groups are still that close, and maybe the groups I was with were the ones that were unique.

It is why watching things like Sons of Anarchy annoy the living shit out of me.

The show feels close to what I grew up with, but if it is based on true things now, it is obviously built on current-day advisors, and it results in a weird separation I didn’t see as a kid (and my friends that were kids went through the same thing).

Growing up, the kids were part of the club. Even the meetings would have kids coming in and out, asking for things and during the most tense standoffs, several times one of the kids coming in would defuse it. It was a set point that all of members seemed to have agreed upon. The children were a centering point, maybe they shouldn’t have been, but I suspect it was closer to what old traveling bands were like then what you see in the movies.

I notice now, at least according to media, that kids are kept away, not allowed to know what the club does with a fear the kids might turn them in or somehow don’t know. Trust me, kids know what their families are doing in criminal or outlaw organizations. I absolutely hate the trope in movies that the family has no clue, they all know, and it is normalized.

Somehow watching them it feels like they (the bikers, other militant groups) have lost some of the humanity. That’s not quite the right word, but it comes close to what I’m trying to share.

Dad, mom and Clyde was on the left, Clyde was a “Tunnel Rat” in Vietnam, I think ’68. This was taken in 1989 Downtown Bellingham.

I wondered why it was so different back then (70s and 80s), and then I realized: watching Westerns about the last group of hardened gunslingers always had a kid that traveled with them, did things for them, and loved them (think Guns of the Magnificent Seven or others like it). All the cowboys expecting to die, but sharing their time with a kid. That’s how they grew up (the vets, I mean). It was part of the media, the culture, etc. It was just the last real bit of humanity they could share. That is probably one of the reasons the vets and everyone around us thought it was a normal thing.

I realize most would say they shouldn’t be including children in their lives, and maybe that is the healthier way for the kids. But I think it also contributes to the loss of that connection those groups have.

It absolutely did damage to me as a kid. I still have baggage I carry because the vets had no one else to confess things to, to be sober with, and because I was there to take care of them when their broken bits wouldn’t work right.

Now that being said, I wouldn’t recommend confessing how many you killed or how you did it, is good for the child (I still can remember counts and stories but starting to forget which story went with which vet), probably best to just share the overall regret instead. That being said, I don’t regret being there and giving them a small piece of peace at least momentarily.

Of course decades pass, and my life moved on, but sometimes I wake up worried that the vets were alone after I grew up and things changed, and no one was there to take care of them.

I also realize that for the child it probably isn’t the healthiest. I do have additional CPTSD because of being there to care for them. I have a ton of baggage that I will carry with me to the end of my days. Yes I know I have been parentified, and it isn’t good for the kids, but part of me wouldn’t change it either.

The result is, I feel sometimes like I have the same, or close enough to call it the same, baggage and PTSD that a Vietnam vet had without having fought a war. Of course all the other stuff that happened as I became an adult with the club only adds to it.

People have told me it is purely because the vets I grew up with included me in their lives, but I don’t think so. Someone who is broken by what they do brings that baggage no matter what. The family still suffers, the alcoholism is still there, the violence and police issues occur.

I could be wrong, but overall I think the families and groups that stayed fully in each other’s lives and didn’t try to carve away the bad parts ended up a little better. All the children of these families are fucked, but I think there is more possible support when a community of broken people help raise each other (there are exceptions and abuse, not saying there isn’t).

Even so, I don’t regret any of that. Even when I wake up sad with some of the memories, I also remember the love they had for me. I never felt safer than when I was with them, taking care of them. Not once did I ever feel fear about them, even when they had flashbacks and violence.

I guess mostly I am sad that people get so broken, and how unfair it is that it happened to them. And whatever the state of god or not, either way it is so unfair people have to go through that. Then all those experiences get lost, even after having gone through so much.

Last photo I have of one of my family friends who was a vet. Of course you have Mom, Dad, Derek (Brother) with his kids and Dennis who was Army Infantry (I can’t remember the unit, I met him as a teen so the relationship was a little different and wasn’t as close). Taken in August 2015, about 5 months before dad passed.
Oh and just to give you a flashback, this is Dennis, mom, dad and Dennis’s girlfriend (on and off for a decade) celebrating when all the bikers came over to my house (approximately ’88/89)

Or… maybe I woke up with anxiety due to the surgery I am getting today. Either way, this is good therapy, and I do feel better rambling.

Dreams and a realization

This is when I realized that my hubby in real life had moved my head from his side of the bed to the edge of my side (facing the floor). I am sure I had rolled way into his side of the bed, and I don’t blame him but because of the dream I was momentarily hurt by that action.

I sat up immediately because its hard for me to stay asleep anyways and I was realizing something that is pretty obvious I am sure to everyone else, but a huge reason as a child I never felt comfortable in people’s houses, especially if I slept over there, was because of my ADHD. I always knew some of it was trauma from violence of people I didn’t live with, but I suspect now ADHD played a much larger role as well.

As a child I was told by people often that I should go home and come back tomorrow or next week.

I always assumed it was because people didn’t like me as a child (and as an adult I thought perhaps I was exhibiting too much trauma stuff, which also was a thing). Hell I would be told that I often would overdo stuff or that “Lucky never knew when to stop a good thing.” As a teen it was bad if I found someone attractive and they laughed when I did something, almost invariable I would double down on it trying to make them even happier… with the obvious results of being told I took it too far.

I realize a large reason is probably my ADHD (which I didn’t get told I actually have until I was 50/51 years old). Although it is pretty clear thinking back.

In addition, my sleep pattern has always sucked and trauma was part of it, but I didn’t realize that ADHD can cause Fragmented Sleep, Shortened Sleep Duration, Early Morning Awakening and Daytime sleepiness, which is 100% me with an average unmedicated sleep of 3-4 hours and even the latest I normally sleep was 3-4am (and usually before 2am, or even like this morning by 1am). That is also a trauma response but never realized also an ADHD response.

As a kid, my friend’s families and people at their homes always treated me like a trouble child who would get sent home. Not because I hurt or argued with anyone, but I couldn’t stop pacing, I had no idea what to do without some sort of structure, and when I slept at anyone’s home I would wake up at 2am and just lay there wanting to go home because invariably if I got up I would wander into the living room bored and not sure what to do.

This resulted in me literally sometimes getting up at 2am and going home, with the same result as I talk about later with my dad.

Even in friends homes that cared about me and I was left to do whatever. I would wander around aimlessly, exploring the house, trying to hold the. animals. I didn’t know or couldn’t understand what they were ok with me doing. I actually hated staying at other people’s places because I didn’t feel welcome. Looking back, definitely some was due to my sometimes trauma informed feralness but often I am sure ADHD.

Hell, the hubby is very supportive, but even he puts down rules such as “no coming back to bed when I get up.” An understandable request albeit frustrating on my part back then (it isn’t in play at the moment, I am allowed to come back to bed the last year or so and it works out, but the first 2-3 decades I was banished when I got up).

The only place as a child/teen or even younger full adult I felt comfortable was my parents house. My mom would get frustrated with me, and yell at me to lay in bed and stop moving around (although sometimes she acted like my dad instead), but I now realize that sometimes my dad would sneak into my room and have me come lay in the living room. Realizing now that I was probably waking up my siblings (I never had my own room past the age of 4), at the time I just thought he knew when I was awake and wanted to hang out. Although full info is he sometimes had PTSD flashbacks and couldn’t sleep himself. However unlike others who would tell me to go home in the middle of the night, or to get away from them and stay out of the room, he would ask if I wanted to sit with him.

In turn sometimes I would hear him having nightmares (sometimes resulting into hearing my mom scold him for keeping her awake, I always thought that was unfair he was having nightmares), and I would get up (because I was already awake) and go into his room and just hug him. When I did this in turn he would hug me back and sometimes just pull me in bed like a big teddy bear and we both fall asleep (with my mom fuming).

Otherwise the most often we would go into the living room where he usually had brought a blanket out. The lights would be off but the tv would be on and he would make up as a little blanket area on the couch for me to sleep in while he sat in his chair he always sat in. Sometimes it was so bad when I was very little he would just hold me I in his chair.

He even did this sometimes when I would have a meltdown during the day or would just start crying for no reason. I weirdly enough have proof of this last thing with a photo took of my dad holding me when I had a bad afternoon in 1975 (I was 3-4 years old then).

Yes, that is me and my dad in 1975,

We would sit there (usually mom wouldn’t get up, it would almost always just be dad) because I wasn’t tired, and watch a movie or show in the dark on an old tv from the 70s. He would always ask if I was hungry and make me a fried bologna or spam sandwich, or homemade poutine, or share a kielbasa dog with me (he would try and get me. to eat sardines in a mustard sauce out of a tin but at the time I would never touch that), and we would just sit in the dark with me the whole night watching tv.

Nowadays I can tell that he was making sure I was doing ok. I used to have horrendous nightmares, even before the trauma events happened later in my childhood. I also would sleep walk horribly, sometimes going outside and have conversations during my sleepwalking to things that no one could see. Sometimes he would be having the nightmares (I guess he had them even before he went to Vietnam, but Vietnam made them so much worse.

Weirdly enough I remember that I felt safe then, and I would eventually drift off to sleep. He never left me alone there though, never. I would wake up multiple times at night to talk with him and he would just chat with me. He could be totally drunk, sober, or stoned and it never changed. He might get mad about things at other times but usually because I was being a butt, but never when I either had problem sleeping or even during the day when I realize now I would have an adhd meltdown.

The image and smell will always stay with me. Him smoking a rolled cigarette made of TOP tobacco in the chair beside me (0r sometimes other end of couch), the only thing I could see in the dark when the tv was off (yes there was a time when TV wasn’t projected into homes at late night, I am that old), at that time all I could see would be the orange/red cherry of his cigarette and. sometimes his deep voice rumbling as he talked to me about something. I also think sometimes I woke up and he was singing but I can’t be sure.

This treatment also happened if I was sick, had my bronchitis going (he apologized when I was an adult because he wouldn’t have smoked if he realized I could get bronchitis from it) or when I would have an ear ache (very common) or a toothache (not as common but I have bad teeth). I remember seeing Telefone, and the big 70s disaster movies on tv this way.

While I realize I sort of rambled a little of subject, I didn’t realize how much of my behavior as a child was not just trauma but ADHD and my dad was the only one who never judged me for it as a kid, even when other parents, or even my mom or siblings would get mad at me.

Also dawned on me that I am probably thinking about this because we are coming up to the anniversary of him passing.

I miss you dad, and I love you.

Also I hate all of you people in my childhood who treated me like a trouble, but mostly I just love you dad.