Saturday, February 17, 2024

Maiah Jezak, Boston Globe

My father’s addiction claimed everything but my love for him

I lost my dad when I was 9. Thirteen years of missing him later, I want you to know about him and why he mattered.

The author schooling her late father, Ryan Jezak, in wrestling in an undated photo.Maiah Jezak

I am a Catholic. In case of an accident, notify a priest.

This is the inscription carved into the pendant my dad was wearing when he overdosed. He was a Catholic, I suppose. He dragged us to so many churches in his final days that I lost count. My favorite was the church where the Sunday school gave out 2-liter pops to whoever correctly answered the most Jesus trivia questions. These attempts at faith did very little to guide my dad to sobriety. On Jan. 30, 2011 (a Sunday), he collapsed on the stairs alone at his home. Nobody knows exactly what his final moments were like as his lungs filled with fluid and his heart stopped beating, but it’s safe to say he was insanely high. He abused prescription pain killers, alcohol, and God knows what else. He had been an addict for the majority of his life. When he died, I was only 9 years old.



I couldn’t give answers to anyone who inquired about the cause of his death until I was an adult. Most of the time these memories feel like recalling a movie I watched instead of my actual life. I don’t remember the funeral. I don’t even remember the last time I saw my dad. What I do remember makes my grief all the more complicated. People incorrectly assume that because of his lifestyle, my dad and I weren’t close. In truth, we were thick as thieves. He would take me to Chinese buffets and make me snow globes out of baby food bottles. He would catch mice to keep as pets and rub my back until I fell asleep. I would sob uncontrollably every time our weekends ended and I had to leave him.

True, he smoked a lot and would get into loud fights with strangers in the grocery store parking lot. He’d tell me long-winded stories about how my mom had “abandoned” him and then would pass out for half the day. He never kept his promises. I even watched him punch a cactus once.



This was my life. If I heard his lungs rattling when we snuggled, I would throw his cigarettes out the window. If he got into a fight with someone, I would give them dirty looks out of solidarity. Nine-year-old me would give my infant brother baths while my dad was asleep in the middle of the day. I’d find beer cans in his room and watch him squish grapes with his feet to make homemade wine. My father was recklessness personified.

Needless to say, I became an exceptionally anxious child. Dad spent my brother’s first birthday in the hospital. Kids don’t know everything, but they can feel everything. I could feel him slipping away throughout my entire life.

It has been 13 years since he died. Grieving a man like my dad has been almost impossible. Addicts are people, and they often have children. Addiction and its warpath permeate every aspect of an addict’s and their loved ones’ lives. This is the reality for millions of people.

I want people to know about my dad. I want people to know about me. Last year I found a letter my dad wrote in AA where he likened his fight with addiction to a brave knight fighting a dragon. He signed that letter “Ryan J. Dragon Warrior.” I like to remember my dad as a warrior.



I will never understand the pain that led him to drugs and alcohol. Or how addiction could be more powerful than his love for me. I will never understand how he could love so hard and still hurt so many people. And I will never understand a God or a universe that could rip him from this world at 35 years old. I’m beginning to be OK with not knowing. Perhaps this is my version of faith.

Maiah Jezak is an educator, writer, and cat lover who is pursuing a master’s degree in Lansing, Mich.

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