I got some emails from my nfather this weekend, and I hate that I am spending energy trying to figure out where they came from. My strategy with my nfather has been to protect myself by not divulging anything of my personal thoughts feelings dreams etc. We don't talk on the phone. He sends the occasional email, then disappears for months at a time. In January he sent one of his immature "it's colder where you are than where I am in Canada" messages, and I didn't feel like responding, so I hadn't written for a couple of months.
Friday I get a message from him, the last line being "Anything you want to discuss, by phone, email or letter?" I of course immediately thought he was angry I hadn't written in so long, but not really having any context or clues, I said "No, there's nothing I want to discuss. Why do you ask?" He wrote back, "Just wondering. We haven't had a serious conversation in years." This has stirred up all sorts of emotional murk. Probably the last time we had a "serious conversation" was when he left my mother 22 years ago, and he couldn't understand why I was angry. He said that I'd be leaving for college in a few years anyway, so why was I upset that he left first? I did send an email three years ago asking about my grandmother, because I was starting therapy, and wondered about all her emotional problems--he wrote back that I shouldn't worry because none of her problems were hereditary! Yeah, except for all the emotional damage she caused to my father, who then damaged me. And then he started recommending all different ways to fix me--medication, EMDR therapy.
Part of me is curious what brought up his desire for a serious discussion, part of me wants to give him the full strength of my fury, and the rest of me says "don't go there, because he will find a way to be hurtful." I really don't know what to say to him. I start to wonder if I'm wrong to keep our relationship as superficial as possible--the guilt kicks in. I know I need to protect myself, but and just let it go, ignore him, but I keep obsessing that I need to have the "right" response. Has anyone else had parents who suddenly ask odd questions?
Greta