Daddy Died a MAGA
His last words were apologies for Facebook posts--it shouldn't have ended that way
Daddy died in August of 2017…it was a terrible and painful death and he was only 61 years old. His last words to me were absolutely unfathomable and embarrassing: He begged for forgiveness for his behavior and his Facebook posts, since 2015. The MAGA mentality he had displayed since Trump came down that escalator. The point of contention in our formerly close relationship—the reason we had barely spoken in two years.
He was dying and he talked about Betsy DeVos.
Years before his death, daddy had sent me several messages through Facebook messenger about “ripping the teeth” out of education departments across the country and I was shocked. I am sick writing those words. I write them because I know I am not alone. I know many of us lost parents and siblings and grandparents and friends to Trumpism. It’s a sad state of affairs and we may as well talk about it, because even though Trump has been out of office for three years, he’s never gone away. We still suffer the loss of our relationships.
Daddy. He was a Navy Seabee. A carpenter. A guitar player. A fast car collector. A good guy. A man who tried to raise two little girls on his own and did it to the best of his ability. A hippie in his pot-smoking, hard-rock youth and a MAGA in his death.
It made no sense. He was never hateful, until he was. He was always caring, until he wasn’t. He was proud of me—the first to graduate with a BA, much less an MA in Education, until he decided the Education Department was a part of a conspiracy. He was always the man who I could count on when I called, but he died a man I didn’t recognize.
What happened?
Well, a lot, and it didn’t start with Trump, but it was cemented and drug to the forefront with his candidacy and election. Daddy was immediately a Trump fan and I thought it odd at first, but I soon grew more upset the more I learned of Trump. I have never watched a ton of TV and only knew of him as being a rich guy in NY with the occasional scandal and bankruptcy.
My dad was the father of two girls…he flinched a little when the “pu$$y tape” was released but made excuses. Daddy had a disabled brother who died of Muscular Dystrophy and he winced when the clip of Trump mocking a disabled reported was spread widely, but didn’t stop supporting Trump. I never knew my dad to be a hypocrite, so I was genuinely surprised to see him support a disgusting misogynist—an unapologetic and prejudiced ableist.
My dad and I grew apart quickly—like, lightning speed. Every time I talked to him, he ranted about dead people voting or some deep state scheme. My dad was sick with a chronic illness, but I could barely talk to him without getting off the phone feeling sick myself. He became a raging misogynist before my eyes saying awful things about Hillary, but it was never based in reality. I mean, there are reasons to dislike Hillary, or anyone else for that matter, but he was talking Pizza-Gate nonsense and trying to figure out code from her emails.
I started avoiding him and skipped visits even though I knew his health wasn’t the best — that’s on me and I still regret it. I just couldn’t stand to see his brain rotting in front of me and his new political opinions on everything from abortion to immigration enraged me. We used to talk about his dogs, his travel, and his work. He was now ranting about locking folks up and welfare abuse and pedophiles. I couldn’t deal with it so I didn’t.
He grew sicker and sicker but that just meant more time in front of the TV or online. He grew even more angry and more conspiratorial.
The actual process of his death was a slow and perverse train that involved a misdiagnosis, drugs that poisoned him, a slew of terribly painful treatments that ultimately led him to a local research hospital that could do nothing more for him.
I saw him several times during this period. He still wasn’t himself, but he was tired of talking about hate and resentments.
In his final days, he asked me what I would do if I were in his position—unbearable pain and doctors who said there was nothing left to treat him with. I said, “I don’t know, but I know you are in pain and there are a lot of reasons to stay, but I understand if you want to go.” He decided to let go.
As he lay dying, he asked me to read to him. He wanted to listen to Moby Dick—a book he meant to read, but never did. I read it to him.
He apologized between chapters for a lot of things that were out of his control when he was a young father and I was a child. I forgave him everything and apologized for not being there like a should have been…and then came the torrent of tears over what had happened to us during the Trump years.
This is where I’ll say that I was just disgusted at his political apologies. I begged him to stop. The internet and Facebook are ridiculous things to talk about when you have only hours left.
Stop, daddy. It doesn’t matter. But, he knew it did matter.
I was asleep in the hospital lounge when a nurse came to tell me she thought he was going. I watched as they helped him along with morphine—his physical pain was unbearable. He passed away within the hour and I was left shaken, confused, in mourning, incredibly sad, and absolutely pissed.
I try to think of him now before the Trump days, but I can’t say that I remember him completely without those conspiratorial rants and bizarre rabbit hole conversations.
And this is why I think it so important to warn others…your memory is all you leave. That’s it. You are what you say and the way you make others feel. Nothing else matters.
I don’t know why I wrote this other than as a warning—your legacy will be impacted by the love or the hate you surround yourself with. I have to go way back before the Trump era to remember my dad properly. I know he knew this at the end, and feverishly tried to take it back before he left. I gave him grace then and I do now, but it doesn’t erase what he said and did and how it impacted our relationship.
And that’s the thing…daddy wasn’t a outlier. His story is common. I wish it weren’t but such is the world we live in now. My hope is that the folks reading this can find grace for their loved one or just peace. Politics shouldn’t have destroyed my relationship with my dad before he died, but they did.
My last memories of him leave a metallic taste in my mouth—bitter bile in my throat. I loved him deeply and it was reciprocated, but his skewed world view at the end of his life tragically confused his legacy and his loved ones, and that is the saddest thing I can say.
~Jess
Thank you for this piece. I fear my parents will have the same ending. The things they now believe are so disconnected from reality and they have started to shape their personalities in baffling, awful ways. I always say Fox News was a gateway drug that destroyed that generation.
Thank you for writing this. I lost my mother suddenly in June of 2019 due to an aneurysm. She had graduated from the University of Missouri law school the same spring I graduated from high school, 1979, and became one of the first female attorneys in Greene County. She and my father divorced my freshmen year in college and she did not remarry until 1990. She succumbed to the brainwashing of Fox News against President Obama despite losing her entire retirement savings under the Bush economic crash; and then supported Trump. We could not discuss anything political because it would mean accepting things she stated as fact which were not true. I will never understand how such an intelligent, liberal woman who was ahead of her time was pulled into the MAGA abyss.