I walked away in tears from a recent dinner with my father. He was lit, or so it felt, brandishing his restaurant bravado with loud voices, large gestures, and bottles of wine preemptively ordered without as much as an ear to the staff or the relatives with whom he was dining. I couldn’t handle it that night. We all have rough evenings, yes. His have evoked anger, sadness, pain from me.
I connect such nights to scenes from years ago. Across our tiny kitchen table, my dad and I would sit and pontificate about markets and world politics and other things on which I knew too little to really be commenting. Lips primed, we held forth on whatever verbal morsel came to mind, actual knowledge notwithstanding. To me it felt like getting closer to truth—or something—back when I thought truth was a sense of enforced security, of demanding validation. I talked and talked and felt so smart. Talking with my dad.
My mom and sister ate with us in silence.
That was how it was. The boys talked an