The incident with the gun, my brother, our father, and me
In my brother’s new book, A Wolf at the Table, there’s a scene where we have a family fight, and my brother runs into my room. He grabs my gun, hands it to me, and says, “Kill him!”
When a reporter asked me about that scene, I said: It wasn’t as big a deal to me as it was to my brother. I’m eight years older, so my perspective is a lot different. And it was, after all, only a BB gun.
To my enormous distress, people have seized bits of that statement and used it to suggest that the scene, or even the whole book, is exaggerated and made up. It’s not. My brother, my mother, and I all agree on the essential truth of the book. We certainly agree that my father was frighteningly mean when he was drunk. And in those years, he was drunk every night, whenever he was home.
The only time he was sober was when he was at school, so his colleagues and students saw a totally different side of him. Luckily, I too saw that side of him later in life, after he stopped drinking.
The fact that my little brother – a small child at the time – felt the need to grab a gun to defend us says a lot about how life was at that time.
Fights with drunks can get ugly.
The fact that it was a BB gun is irrelevant to the true emotional tale my brother relates: I was holding our father at gunpoint. The fact is, my brother was terrified and thought that was the defense of last resort. So he got it, and gave it to me, because he believed I was his defender. And it worked. Our father went downstairs and things simmered down.
My brother also writes that I warned my father, “I keep the rifle loaded,” which I did. How many of you were proud teenagers with BB guns and air rifles? How many kept them loaded, in case a grizzly bear came through the door? How many of you can remember feeling like that?
As much as I am troubled by the scary stories from my youth, I feel I should share the story of why it was “only” a BB gun. And why we did not have a “real gun” in the house.
I wrote in Look Me in the Eye about how I grew up around guns. Down at my grandparents in Georgia, most every farmer or landowner had guns. Mine were no exception. When we moved to Massachusetts, my grandfather sent my father a gun, too. He sent him a WWII surplus Springfield bolt action rifle. Luckily, he didn’t send shells.
The gun arrived about the time my brother turned three. My father fell into a black depression, and talked of suicide. I wrote about some of those incidents in Look Me in the Eye. Here’s one that didn’t make the book:
My father would get drunk, and sit the gun on the floor, aimed at the ceiling. He’d be in his chair, at the kitchen table, with the old black and white TV in the corner. He’d drink his sherry, rest his head on the end of the barrel, and cock the gun and pull the trigger. Time after time after time. Yesterday, our mother told me she remembered going to sleep to the click of the empty gun. Frightened, she gave it to a friend for safekeeping. I have it today.
So there you have it. That’s the reason there was only a BB gun in our house.
There are a number of other inaccuracies that are being reported. One reporter said, [A Wolf at the Table] claims Robison put a cigarette out on Burroughs' forehead. That’s wrong. That is in my book, in a chapter called The Nightmare Years, and also in my brother's 2003 memoir Dry.
When I wrote that, my mother read it and said, I don’t remember that happening, but I just don’t know . . .
My first wife read it and said, Oh my, when you were seventeen years old you showed me a mark on your chest where he’d burned you with a cigarette. Don’t you remember? It was on you! Thirty some years later, spot has vanished and the memory has faded. So the evidence suggests that both my brother and I may have had cigarettes mashed out on us, and we've repressed the memories. Obviously people can have different and even contradictory memories of bad things. That’s how memory works. Saying we're in disagreement about those points is simply untrue.
After reading this story, I hope you will re-read the epilogue to Look Me in the Eye, where I made peace with my father at the end of his life. Because that’s how I want to remember him today. People do change, and the last half of my father’s life – after we’d left home and he was remarried - shows that.
In closing, let me just affirm I am very disturbed to see my words taken out of context and used to fan the flames of controversy when in fact there is no controversy. My brother and I don’t have any dispute about the content of our books. Augusten and I may interpret the meaning of childhood experiences differently, but we do not disagree about the underlying events themselves. And those are the facts.
Here's a link to order my brother's book:
http://www.amazon.com/Wolf-Table-Memoir-My-Father/dp/0312342020/ref=pd_sim_b_img_6
When a reporter asked me about that scene, I said: It wasn’t as big a deal to me as it was to my brother. I’m eight years older, so my perspective is a lot different. And it was, after all, only a BB gun.
To my enormous distress, people have seized bits of that statement and used it to suggest that the scene, or even the whole book, is exaggerated and made up. It’s not. My brother, my mother, and I all agree on the essential truth of the book. We certainly agree that my father was frighteningly mean when he was drunk. And in those years, he was drunk every night, whenever he was home.
The only time he was sober was when he was at school, so his colleagues and students saw a totally different side of him. Luckily, I too saw that side of him later in life, after he stopped drinking.
The fact that my little brother – a small child at the time – felt the need to grab a gun to defend us says a lot about how life was at that time.
Fights with drunks can get ugly.
The fact that it was a BB gun is irrelevant to the true emotional tale my brother relates: I was holding our father at gunpoint. The fact is, my brother was terrified and thought that was the defense of last resort. So he got it, and gave it to me, because he believed I was his defender. And it worked. Our father went downstairs and things simmered down.
My brother also writes that I warned my father, “I keep the rifle loaded,” which I did. How many of you were proud teenagers with BB guns and air rifles? How many kept them loaded, in case a grizzly bear came through the door? How many of you can remember feeling like that?
As much as I am troubled by the scary stories from my youth, I feel I should share the story of why it was “only” a BB gun. And why we did not have a “real gun” in the house.
I wrote in Look Me in the Eye about how I grew up around guns. Down at my grandparents in Georgia, most every farmer or landowner had guns. Mine were no exception. When we moved to Massachusetts, my grandfather sent my father a gun, too. He sent him a WWII surplus Springfield bolt action rifle. Luckily, he didn’t send shells.
The gun arrived about the time my brother turned three. My father fell into a black depression, and talked of suicide. I wrote about some of those incidents in Look Me in the Eye. Here’s one that didn’t make the book:
My father would get drunk, and sit the gun on the floor, aimed at the ceiling. He’d be in his chair, at the kitchen table, with the old black and white TV in the corner. He’d drink his sherry, rest his head on the end of the barrel, and cock the gun and pull the trigger. Time after time after time. Yesterday, our mother told me she remembered going to sleep to the click of the empty gun. Frightened, she gave it to a friend for safekeeping. I have it today.
So there you have it. That’s the reason there was only a BB gun in our house.
There are a number of other inaccuracies that are being reported. One reporter said, [A Wolf at the Table] claims Robison put a cigarette out on Burroughs' forehead. That’s wrong. That is in my book, in a chapter called The Nightmare Years, and also in my brother's 2003 memoir Dry.
When I wrote that, my mother read it and said, I don’t remember that happening, but I just don’t know . . .
My first wife read it and said, Oh my, when you were seventeen years old you showed me a mark on your chest where he’d burned you with a cigarette. Don’t you remember? It was on you! Thirty some years later, spot has vanished and the memory has faded. So the evidence suggests that both my brother and I may have had cigarettes mashed out on us, and we've repressed the memories. Obviously people can have different and even contradictory memories of bad things. That’s how memory works. Saying we're in disagreement about those points is simply untrue.
After reading this story, I hope you will re-read the epilogue to Look Me in the Eye, where I made peace with my father at the end of his life. Because that’s how I want to remember him today. People do change, and the last half of my father’s life – after we’d left home and he was remarried - shows that.
In closing, let me just affirm I am very disturbed to see my words taken out of context and used to fan the flames of controversy when in fact there is no controversy. My brother and I don’t have any dispute about the content of our books. Augusten and I may interpret the meaning of childhood experiences differently, but we do not disagree about the underlying events themselves. And those are the facts.
Here's a link to order my brother's book:
http://www.amazon.com/Wolf-Table-Memoir-My-Father/dp/0312342020/ref=pd_sim_b_img_6
Comments
The mudslinging has already started about Augusten's book and it's not even out yet. It's hard to imagine what some people get out of unnecessary negativity, but I guess they have their reasons.
You are a class act.
You and Augusten have written memoirs, not exhaustively researched nonfiction. Impressions, feelings, subsequent growth and ability to look back are all part of memoirs and I think why so many of us are compelled to read them.
I don't understand what the controversy is here.
I also particularly loved the end of your book where you did reconcile with your father (not that this is necessary or even desireable for everyone) but it showed a different side of you, as well as the fact that people can change.
Jerry Waxler
Memory Writers Network
Quiet woof.
Kim
As someone who grew up in a household where substance abuse, verbal and physical abuse and mental illness were part of the mix, I can relate to the sometimes vastly different memories that siblings and parents often have. We all remember or forget our own version of events and they are all true to each of us.
I also appreciate your clarification about the good relationship you had with your father in the later years of his life. My father was a recovering alcoholic for over twenty years before he died and I feel very fortunate that we were able to reconcile and have a great relationship for more than a decade. I think it's important that people understand that many families endure horrible events and difficulties, but that under the right circumstances there can be forgiveness and redemption and healing.
And at least your father is dead so he won't try to sue like Dr. Finch's family did.
I also know from experience that the publishing industry itself is to blame for publishing some of those fake memoirs that have put the whole genre under scrutiny, since many agents and editors actively tell authors to change novels into memoirs to make them more marketable (I know this from personal experience).
From what I can tell, your brother used his journals to help him remember many of his early experiences, and he maintained the immediacy of his emotions at the time.
I read Running With Scissors immediately after Look Me in the Eye, and immediately noticed the difference in perception.
However, since I knew you were both raised differently and you perceive things differently, I understood and believed both accounts of your parents' relationship.
Not everyone can look at things with a wider point of view, and you're always going to get varying reactions to your stories.
i completely do not understand why people try to make so much trouble, other than, perhaps they are attempting to make a name for themselves?
"haters" will always confuse me. what is the point in questioning someone's life story? seriously, what would be the point?
we all know that hearts speak to other hearts. meaning, like with your book "look me in the eye" is about your life story and asperger's. i don't have asperger's but i identify with your book as much as i've always identified with augusten's.
b/c hearts speak to other hearts.
bravo.
Amy
Blessings to Augusten and John for having integrity.
The bigger, more popular, more successful you get, the more jealousy rears its ugly head - and that's all this carping is about - they're just mad cause Augusten succeeded and they didn't.
End of story.
I say: Ignore them! Don't let the bastards get you (or your brother) down.
I've ordered my copy of your brother's new book and I'm looking forward to reading it.
A supportive 'woof' from Canada.
Kudos to you and your brother for having the courage to muddle through bad memories and try to heal.
I will be buying his book when we get home in June.
Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.
Only you and your brother know the truth of your childhood with an alcholic, just as every child of an alcoholic or an abusive person knows their truth in their own way. The reality is most alcoholic families, most dysfunctional families, have a vested interest in keep the world at bay, in keep the "truth" their intimate little secret.
Your post is eloquent and I think you are a very grace-filled person to handle the controversy the way you do.
I have 3 kids on the spectrum. At ages 9, 11 & 13, they really do percieve (and thus remember) things differently. I teach them that who they are is the sum of all their experiences, thoughts and feelings. Their memories have been and will forever be engraved in their hearts, no matter how the other two remember these things.
I appreciate the dignified way you have defended yourself and your brother today.
~A
I devoured every last word.
Quite a family you have there, Robison.
I, too, am so proud of the dignified way that you have addressed this issue.
Your response is honest, insightful, and eloquent. Indeed, memory is selective; and how we choose to assimilate the facts has more to do with our attitude and point of view. Perception is an ACTIVE process of interpreting and filtering external information to mirror our internal paradigm of reality. The mind will always choose the simplest model of reality to fit all of the supporting evidence. Therefore, your brother's experience is very REAL to him. The specific details may vary slightly or sometimes conflict because of your individual perspectives.
Erica,
I absolutely love your quote from Tolstoy:
"Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way."
What a brilliant observation of this controversy...
Woof!
And, congrats on your new status as an honorary graduate. :)
When I read either of you write about the other, I love the way the 2 of you genuinely like and respect each other.