7.07.2007

Precious

Be all that you can be.

Live to your best ability.

You're a smart girl, and I only want the best for you.

I know what's right for you, I'm your father.

I'm just trying to give you some friendly parental advice.

I think you could be so much if you didn't waste your life at your mom's place.

I'm really unhappy that you chose not to embrace your talents and get a real job--how about holding traffic signs in Vancouver?


Sounds funny, doesn't it?

It is all, to some extent, my father speaking. Not verbatim, but close enough to make no nevermind.

Tonight I attempted to tell him I want to go back to school. My goal: a degree in Theatre, possibly double-majoring in Anthropology. Then on to bigger and better things than being a liquor-store clerk and short order cook.

What every loving father would want for his uber-intelligent daughter, right?

I gave him the spiel, told him I wished to attend MCC again in January (that's in 6 months) full-time, and then again next summer, and then on to the University of Hawaii (a real University) in fall of 2008--full time. Tuition costs, et al, should be by my current rough draft estimates just under 20,000 (USD) a year. Providing I take the standard 4 years to complete my degree, that totals out to [roughly] 80,000 (USD). For a degree. For a college education. For a guarantee of a life well-lived.

Pretty cheap, by current college cost estimates. You'd think he'd go for it.

What I got in response was him saying he didn't believe me, because every time I talk to him I lie to him, and I need to get away from my mother.

1. He lies too. 2. Mom is in Powell River and I would be going back to Hawaii, which is 2700 miles away. I think that's "getting away from her".

O, well, she'd follow you there.

That's a lame excuse, Dad, because it can be used no matter where I want to go to school. It's not even a real reason.

Your mom wants to go back to Hawaii.

She doesn't. I could get a sworn affidavit saying she didn't.

I don't believe you, you lie everytime you talk to me.

The same could be said for you, dad.

Oh yeah, how do you figure?

You're a parent. Parents lie; it's fact.

FUCK YOU. *click*

Well. That was mature.


The sad thing--I'm not kidding. This was our conversation, more or less word for word.

So I'm searching for scholarships, and planning a trip to see my lawyer.

I will get my college education, despite my asshole of a progenitor.