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My Father’s Ghosts – Joe Pitts

It was the last winter of America’s holiday from history—less than a year before September 11, 2001—and as cold as you could expect from a winter day in Chandler, Arizona, at around 60 degrees. My mother and her parents were there to greet me on my entry into this world, alongside the doctor who cut my umbilical cord and checked my vitals. My grandfather drove me home that day, a slightly worn “McCain 2000” campaign sticker on his bumper. 

I am what previous generations called a “bastard child,” though I don’t consider myself much of a bastard (others have mixed opinions). That I was born without a father was not something I understood as significant for many years. Those born fatherless, like those born blind, never fully understand what they’ve missed. My childhood is filled with fond memories. Staring out the window of my grandparents’ Sedona home with its view of Snoopy Rock, eating scoop after scoop of homemade vanilla ice cream, playing tag with friends in the cool evening, zig-zagging through cacti-dotted nature and suburban homes adorned in desert tones.

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