sent him from prison insisting that everything would be all right.
His dadâs death was a landmark event in his life. It not onlyriddled him with guilt because he believed his father would have been fine if he did not get convicted, but it also reinforced the idea that life was short and to live each day as if it were your last.
âObviously, there is truth to that,â his therapist said to him the week before he saw his kids at Vanquish. âBut could it be that youâre using that as an excuse to live this lifestyle of a younger man?â
âMaybe I am,â Elliott conceded. âI donât know. I just know it feels like the thing for me to do right now. Maybe it will help me relate better to my kids and can help me rebuild our relationship.â
âWhat I can say for sure is that youâre not going to rebuild the relationship hoping to rebuild it,â Dr.Nottingham said. âNothing happens without action. So, the question becomes: What are you going to do?â
Elliott was stumped. âYouâre always asking me questions,â he said. âI come here for answers.â
âI just gave you an answer,â she said. âDo something. If it were me, I would call my kids together and tell them what they want to hear.â
âAnd whatâs that?â Elliott said.
âDo I really need to tell you that?â
âThere you go again with the questions,â he responded.
Dr. Nottingham looked at him.
Finally, Elliott said, âThere are a lot of things I want to say to them. But then my son gets so angry and disrespectful.â
âHeâs only angry because he loves you,â she said.
âWhat?â Elliott asked.
âHe cannot express his love because heâs angry. But through his anger heâs expressing his love,â she said. âHe could not be so mad at you if he didnât care about you as he does.â
âHis sister is mad at me, too, but sheâs very respectful and available to me,â Elliott said.
âYour daughter is spoiled and the female extension of you,â Dr. Nottingham said. âThe doting father to a daughter is almost more valuable than anything she could ever receive. At the same time, her brother is her twin and that connection is usually unbreakable. Itâs natural for her to go with him, even if her heart is telling her something else.
âFor Daniel, his mother is the symbol of life for him, and the older he gets, the more responsibility to protect and defend her he takes on, especially after a divorce. He feels like heâs protecting and defending her by being angry with you.â
Elliott left his session convinced he would have to take the lead to end the contentious relationship with his children. He thought he would invite them over for dinner and have a heart-to-heart. But before he made the call, he ran into them at the lounge while with their college friend, Tamara.
He went on that night and the next to have nice times with Tamara, but he was saddled with the thought of what his kids thought of him. He did not feel like meeting Henry for lunch or doing much of anythingâsudden fatigue he attributed to post-cancer trials. But it really was mental. He was drained from his lack of a relationship with Daniel and Danielle, and Friday nightâs encounter only magnified the rift.
Worse, he was embarrassed. It was one thing to philander with women less than half his age. It was another that his kids knew itâ and were college classmates of Tamara. Caught up in the moment, he pushed aside the awkwardness of the situation. With quiet time to think about it, he was panicked.
He sat on his balcony sipping on an Arnold Palmer and lamented his plight. This was far from the relationship he expected to have with his children. He called Lucy, who lived in Southwest Atlanta, to see if she could offer advice. He had spoken to her on this subject many times over the
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