Mom walked a bit lighter on the earth; my little sister, Suzie, giggled louder; and I—well, I gained a dad. Most people would call Paul my stepdad, but there’s nothing “step” about him.
My father, the man whose genes run through me, had left two years earlier, when I was 9. One day, he just never came home from work. Mom tried to explain it to us, but we already knew that things weren’t good between them. What I didn’t expect was that he would never come to see us. He never even phoned.
You probably think that as his son, I was sad. But I wasn’t. My father was not a kind man. Not to me or my sister, and especially not to my mom.
When my parents found out they were pregnant with me, my father moved Mom far away from her family in Saskatchewan, Canada, to Ann Arbor, Michigan. I had never met my grandparents, aunties, uncles, or any of my cousins.
He never said it, but I’m pretty sure my father hated that my mom was Cree. Why else would he forbid her to speak Cree or practice our ceremonies or do anything that was part of our culture?
I do have one memory though. I was about 7 or 8. In the middle of the night, I headed to the kitchen to get a drink. As I got close, I noticed music playing. The music was new to me, and the drumbeat was powerful. I peeked around the corner, and there was my mom, dancing by candlelight. She stood tall, her head high, shoulders back as her feet softly moved to the beat of the drum. In her hand was what looked like a bundle of feathers.
In the middle of the night, she was keeping her culture—our culture—alive.
Nine years of living with my father meant I knew almost nothing about who I truly was. I’m pretty sure he was ashamed of us, or at least that’s how it felt. But I always knew Mom was proud of me, and that was all I needed—until she brought Paul home.
Paul quickly became a regular at our dinner table and around our house. He’s Cree like us—but from Treaty 8 territory in Alberta. He came to teach for a semester, and loved it so much he stayed. Paul and Mom both work at the University of Michigan; that’s where they met. He came into the library looking for a book, and my mom, a librarian, helped him find it.
Not long after Paul came into our lives, Mom got back in touch with her family. Our family. Although we hadn’t been able to go to Saskatchewan to meet them, we were FaceTiming a couple times a week. I liked knowing I was part of a big family and that I looked like them. I especially loved watching how Mom laughed with her siblings.
Now Mom walks every day just like she did that night I saw her dancing: head high, shoulders back.