Going to Seminary | Part 13
by Elouise

Summer 1972 – Columbia, South Carolina, 1 year before we began seminary
It’s early spring 1973. My father’s response is unexpected and disheartening. I’ve just told him I’m going to go to seminary to earn a degree in Bible and Theology. I’m not sure how he’ll take this news. I’m nearly 30 years old, and have been married to D for over 7 years. We have two young children not yet in school.
My father looks at me without saying anything right away. Then he tells me it doesn’t matter what he thinks. I’m now married to D. If D thinks my going to seminary is appropriate, that’s all that matters. It’s none of his business.
No congratulations. No sign of being proud of his eldest daughter. No interest in why I would do such a thing as this. Not even a raised eyebrow. Just an emotionally flat inability to engage with me about this.
My mind returns often to his response. He seems finished with me. Especially when it comes to decisions I make about my future. From my side, I have a closet full of unfinished business to which I now add another item.
Every time I visited him while I was in seminary he wanted to know what I was studying. Sometimes he asked me what I was learning, or what was new in this or that area of theology.
Yet even then, he didn’t seem interested in my responses or my opinions. Sometimes he let me know he already knew all about that. Sometimes he listened long enough to find a hook, a way of changing the subject to what he already knew or had done or thought about something.
I often wondered how he would relate to me if I were his first-born son. Would he feel ambivalent about his son going to seminary? Of course not. But that wasn’t reality. I was.
And then there was D. My father was overtly happy and excited about D going to seminary. It was painful to watch him interacting with D. He was always full of questions about what D was studying, theological issues, and what D’s plans were for the future. In many ways, D functioned as his surrogate eldest son.
It was even more painful listening to him talk about D with others. When it came to me, he didn’t seem to know what to say. Was I disgracing him in some way? He never said so. But his silence spoke volumes. I assumed it was about his comfort level with what I was or was not doing.
Today I know it wasn’t about me. It was about my father. Perhaps I triggered shame in him. Especially shame about his unfulfilled dream of getting a seminary degree.
A few years later, before I’d finished seminary studies, my father admitted he felt jealous of me. I was doing what he always wanted to do. I was studying theology at a seminary. For a degree.
My father never gave me his blessing, before or after I married. The pattern continued throughout my seminary studies, even though he enjoyed the way my studies gave him a way to talk about his studies and what he already knew and often assumed I did not. Always in teaching mode, of course. I was still his little girl ‘student.’
Back then I didn’t know how to interrupt my father or ask him tough questions. I didn’t know my own voice. It was years before I was ready to have an adult conversation with him.
Though I didn’t realize it then, my seminary studies began growing me up as a theologian and as an adult woman. One course at a time, one distressing or exhilarating experience at a time, one risk at a time, one discovery at a time.
To be continued….
© Elouise Renich Fraser, 25 January 2016
Photo credit: DAFraser (and his tripod), dress and tie by Elouise
‘it wasn’t about me. It was about my father’. It seems to me that it was a shame you didn’t come to that earlier.
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Yes, it is a shame. Part of the legacy handed on to me. My father, unfortunately, never came to this understanding about his own father’s abusive behavior. In some ways, my entire recovery is about discerning was is and is not about me. One of the legacies of child abuse is that it’s always my fault. Sometimes I still have that knee-jerk reaction when something goes wrong. But it doesn’t last long! I had to learn to be a skunk instead of a turtle (spewing out the blame rather than taking it into my hard-shelled guilt chamber)! D helped me gain the skunk expertise. He’s one of the best I’ve ever seen! 🙂
Elouise
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Your last paragraph rings in my soul, Elouise – I, too, grew so much in and through seminary. It was, and remains, a strange and wonderful gift…
Thank you for reminding me that in these days when it can seem (to me, anyway) more strange than wonderful. God is still in the room, though, and the wonder remains…
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You’re welcome. Sometimes the gift and the presence of God reside in the strangest of places. It’s a wonder God doesn’t desert us. And a truth to hold onto.
Elouise
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I wasn’t going to comment on this, but I feel there is another issue behind your father’s unkindness, which I have also encountered in my mother.
Perhaps your father was jealous of you because he felt he was competing with you and felt threatened by your success.
That would also help to explain some of his unkindness to you as a little girl, too, a girl who would say what she thought and who stubbornly refused to bend….. (Thank God!).
But you were pliant and good and kind, and you are capable and lovely, and I am so proud to have you as a friend. It is such a shame that your Dad was stuck in his rut, seeing you as a threat. He missed so much.
We strive and strive to win the love of our parents, and that might be glancing off at the wrong angle, because they don’t see us as we think they should. xxx
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Fran, Thank you for this wise comment. I never ever would have thought (as a child) he was jealous of me. Especially for all the reasons you name. In retrospect, you help me see this differently. I’ve sometimes wondered if he felt threatened by me (and, in fact, by my Mom who could run circles around him in many ways).
Thanks also for commenting based on your own experience. Your last line is especially beautiful. It’s also comforting. They don’t see us as we are, or as we think (rightly) they should. In my parents’ case, they were probably incapable of that–though in different ways. It is indeed a tragedy. I’m grateful to be here writing this to you as my friend, the way I am right now! 🙂
Elouise
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Jealous….or competitive, maybe, seeking approval from someone. Was your household competitive? Ours was!
It’s a big knot, and I’m still unsure it’s worth trying to unravel too deeply. xxx
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We four sisters were competitive (each in her own way) for our parents’ time, attention, affection, favor and favors. And, I might add, jealous of the one or ones who seemed to get that.
I also agree that we can’t unravel everything. Especially because it isn’t all about us (even though it sometimes seems to be). Going as far as I can (without being consumed by it) gives me more empathy with and compassion for both my parents–and for myself as a parent. So it’s easier to change my own attitudes and behaviors, without denying reality.
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