A Recap In Your Ass, Part 2: Injustice Is Blind May 12, 2008
Had we been born a family of Greek humorists, my father - he of one seeing eye - may have appreciated the comedy in being called Cyclops from time to time.
But we are Koreans. Who pride ourselves on perfectionism (Ed. note: Uh), discipline (Ed. note: No), the use of metal chopsticks, love procured through immediate acceptances into top universities, and a brand of humor that plays like a macabre game of Hot Potato - the main objective being to pass any focus on you and your faults onto a nearby unsuspecting family member as soon as you can, with extra points awarded for verbal bullets directed at nonexistent weight gain or the time you fell off that seesaw you shared with hefty-and-perhaps-appropriately-named Asia (you know, like the continent) because if you couldn’t tell her you were afraid to sit on a seesaw with her, then it’s only fair you were catapulted off.
Everyone being fair game, that is, except for the patriarch himself.
To his defense, the story of my father’s lost eyesight is one more like Greek tragedy: An immigrant in pursuit of the American dream with a wife and two young daughters, conducting the mundane task of pruning a small tree in the front yard of his first American home when an errant branch poked his healthy eye and he was rushed to a hospital where a doctor of malpractice leanings slipped and slid with a scalpel too freely and injured the eye unfixable.
It’s the stuff of injustice and hard yanks at the heartstrings. Of Lifetime made-for-TV movies dowsed in sepia hues. And, as his children came to learn, the stuff that could add that extra oomph of guilt to already lofty expectations.
The story became intertwined with demands to do well in school. To become doctors one day, but - with a twist from that classic Asian demand! - doctors who could fix their father’s eye and restore his sight. A demand that my younger sister followed to Johns Hopkins and I followed to my junior year in high school, when I finally confessed to my parents that I had no desire to apply to Pre-Med programs when it came time to apply to colleges.
It led to my parents both not speaking to me for two weeks.
A relative period of peace and quiet in my memory.
When the speaking resumed, the new commands handed to me were to become CEO of big company, maybe Coca Cola or IBM! Or to pursue politics because, surely, the position of Freshman Class President would look fine on any future senator’s resume. But first, law. Yes, law would have to do.
And the story of my father’s eye gained a new spin. While my younger sister pursued a career of medicine to fix the eye that lost a little more of its sight each day, I would become a purveyor of justice and use my father’s eye as my marker for what the injustice I needed to fight in this country looked like.
Slightly cloudy, a little withered, and, on its bad days, the provocation of a bad golf game.
A part of me could accept this. While the story served useful in well-placed doses to guilt his daughters into hand-picked careers (and to parlay martyrdom in college application essays for said daughters), whiny complaints about his eye were non-existant from my father. So little did he mention it day to day that I often forgot that he could only see well with one. When he explained with regret and frustration how he really hadn’t seen that car that had come up on his left side after a near accident, one couldn’t help but feel sympathy for him. A pang of sadness in ones heart and a re-commitment to offer this man something that could help him justify his pursuit of a Dream that was found to be littered with small trees and errant branches.
A law degree from Harvard University, after all, only needs one good eye to view.
But it’s been two and some years after my graduation from college and I’m no closer to holding a Harvard - or any - law degree in my hands. By my choosing.
So it was only prudent that the gods who have always favored fathers over their children (Ed. note: Look at Abraham and Issac!) step in during my visit home back in March and propel me from the life I’ve carved out for myself during the last few years that hasn’t included an omnipresent panic that I’m disappointing everyone.
Driving with my sister to meet our parents for dinner, we discussed her upcoming plans to apply to medical schools and her consideration of MD-PhD programs. I jested on her fine job of making sure our father’s eye and the horrors committed by that errant branch and the villainous doctor so many years ago would finally be remedied.
A pause far too long and silent passed after my comment.
And this - along with prods of WHAT ARE YOU HIDING FROM ME - is how I learned that I directly contributed to my father’s loss eyesight.
“But I remember the day that Ahp-ba was rushed to the hospital. I was outside while he was pruning that damn tree but I wasn’t anywhere near him! And I remember that eyepatch he had to wear for weeks afterwards,” I stammered. “He looked like some awful Korean caricature of Zorro with that moustache he used to have.”
“Yeah, well, one day shortly after that eyepatch was removed, I guess he was holding you up in his arms, and you had some picture that you had painted at school that you wanted him to see and he wasn’t looking at it so you kept waving it around. And you cut him in his eye with it,” my sister revealed.
“A first-grade picture is why he’s blind in that eye? But what about the doctor? The bad guy doctor?” I protested, while cringing at the idea of how painful a paper cut in ones eyeball sounded.
“I guess there were two doctors. The first one, after the tree incident, did a good job. But Ahp-ba had to go to the hospital AGAIN after you paper cut his eyeball since his eye was still recovering. And that’s the doctor that screwed up his eye.”
“So. Basically. Right now. You’re telling me that if I hadn’t waved around some first grade piece of watercolor shit or whatever it was and poked his eyeball with it, he never would have had to see the doctor that fucked up his eye and caused him to become blind in that eye?”
“Yeah… Sorry,” she squeaked.
When I relayed the story to my friend Pete once I arrived back in Chicago, he seemed unimpressed. “It was still the doctor that fucked up his eye, though,” he observed.
But, see, that’s not how this works.
When my father’s car was rear-ended my sophomore year in high school on his way to pick me up from a golf match, it wasn’t the other driver or the rain or the bad road conditions that were at fault. It was mine.
That’s how this game works.
While I find it admirable that my father never used this juicy piece of guilt-trip trigger against me in the eighteen or so odd years his eye has been injured, I have to say that knowing he chose to keep this information from me only makes knowing it worst.
Had he told me, I could choose to play Card Bitter. I’d still feel guilty, but hey, I’m a victim too.
Because that’s also how this game works.
But knowing that he told my sister this a couple months ago as they discussed her thoughts of pursuing surgical in the field of ocular diseases and disorders, him in some mood of confiding and bonding, and that it was unintentionally shared with me - due to my sister’s inability to lie because she considers staying silent actively lying and yes, we are blood relatives - is sugar icing on the cake tiered with mishaps committed by this eldest daughter to a set of immigrant parents, the one with all that potential just going to waste!
It’s also a reminder that for all ills my father is, he’s a man that’s sacrificed a lot for his family. Who - rather than throw piles of money to fight a doctor’s malpractice that would most certainly take tedious amounts of time and maybe end in a settlement no where near what he deserved - chose to save for his daughters’ future college funds. And buy music lessons. And clothing and housing and food and vacations and whatever else our family needed.
Who never let me have any idea that I led him to see that doctor who injured his eye unfixable.
It’s a hard yank at my heartstrings.
And I’m reminded of an instance in high school when I caught my mother struggling to keep one eye shut as she drove us home. She explained that sometimes she tries to grasp what it must be like for my dad.
I don’t have to go to those lengths. Trying to make sense of the tragedy and comedy that is life with my father and justifying the surges of hate that can all too quickly be followed by remorseful waves of gratefulness can feel all too much like I’m only using one good eye to interpret everything, the other one busy turning a blind eye.
Just call me Emotional Cyclops.