While standing tall in tree pose, I had one of those fleeting thoughts – a moment of truth floating in the breeze.
A photo of writer Michael J. Norton when he was four years old. (Photo: Courtesy of Michael J. Norton)
Posted on June 19, 2026 at 05:26 AM
“I’m not my father. But now I wonder if my father wishes he were me?”
It was only a few years ago when this question crept into my mind in a flash of omg realization.
I was standing in Tree posebreathing as calmly as a yoga class, when this provocation led to me rewriting the story of my life with a new perspective and a slightly happier ending.
My father was an angry man. Some of the guys played golf. He had a good temper. Any conversation between father and son was just a monologue full of criticism and disappointment. I never took it personal – if you lived under his ‘roof’, he was just as mean to everyone.
But please, there’s no need for sympathy here. My father insisted that I read the newspaper, so I knew from a young age that there was a big world out there. There will be more to life. I also saw that there are a lot of evil people in the world. They were all someone’s son, father or brother. One of those men happened to be my father. Luck of the draw.
One day, after school, I was a little girl in second grade, smartly dressed in my Catholic school uniform, and I snuck into confession to chat with my favorite priest. I had a great idea. Calmly, rationally, and with adult-like authority, I presented my case, “…You see, we’re all happier when he’s not home. As soon as his car pulls up in the driveway, my mother’s smile evaporates. We all split up in our rooms. We’d all be happier if they separated.” Even a seven-year-old can see that this is the logical conclusion.
The priest could hardly say: “I’ll see what I can do.” So much for the secrecy of the confession room. The priest advised my father, whose calculated remorse skillfully concealed his anger. But he kept a lid on her. This child —for him Kid – he was unpredictable. I wasn’t the one to tremble. I had a backbone. I can fight my own battles. At that time, in a small town, reputation was still important. From that moment on, we lived life like boxers huddled in our corners, fully aware that the formidable opponent was always ready for the next round. I think he also knew I was right, he was a man trapped in the wrong life.
I have outgrown my parents. I went to school in Boston and London. I lived in New York and Santa Monica. I traveled to strange places. Vacations require a passport. He spent his entire life in Philipsburg, New Jersey. He was a big fish in a small pond. I was a small fish in a big pond.
I don’t remember my father smiling or laughing except for what may have been the last time I saw him. I took it to the bank. He held my arm as we crossed a street in Easton, Pennsylvania. That was the first time my father needed me. I looked around and wondered if he was there Yoga studio Anywhere in the region. My father said with a spontaneous laugh: “Yoga?!” You were a mystery to him. The son who lived in a world that was strange to him. A world full of yoga, frequent flyer miles, and hummus.
Father’s Day has always been an oxymoron to me, a celebration of a man who has no interest in playing father to his children. His children were a nuisance. disappointment.
When he died, I cleaned out his things: very nice cufflinks, amazingly ugly ties, and a box of matchbooks and pens from every steakhouse within three hundred miles. Tucked away — physically and metaphorically — was a box of photos. All black and white. Pictures of a young man before children. Before grinding begins. There was my father, looking dapper, wearing a smile I’d never seen before. He was on the track. He and a friend owned a horse. They raced over it. This was the world he loved. Risk energy. Magic lunch club. And always, hand-tied hat. This is the world he abandoned.
While standing tall in tree pose, I had one of those fleeting thoughts – a moment of truth floating in the breeze. My dad never had the luxury of walking into a Lululemons and heading to a yoga class. It worked. constantly. This high school graduate had six children and a self-mandated mandate that they all earn a college degree. There was little time for me in his days. “Om” was not in his vocabulary.
The physical benefits of yoga are powerful: agility, flexibility, strength and endurance. But I really appreciate the transformative emotional benefits. I found a greater sense of calm. I’ve managed to calm down Squirrels in my head– To silence the noise of life that hinders clarity.
Yoga helped me see who my father was, not as an opponent in a lifelong tug-of-war, but as a young man burdened by the pressures of providing for his family. I never saw the compromises and sacrifices that defined his existence. A fleeting picture of my father at peace Mountain pose I exhaled, not from one breath, but from my entire life.
I was able to see that even if I didn’t have the perfect father, I could understand what that was like for me. A man who didn’t have all that much time to enjoy his life. He had his own children. His Sunday morning. As a runner for over 40 years, I estimate I’ve spent about 15,000 hours soaking up the sun on a six-mile run. My father never owned a pair of sneakers. I have the luxury of “getting angry” when a Zoom call interferes with my baseball plans. Seven days a week, my father always minded his own business. Instead of indulgences, he had bills to pay. He was never the father I always hoped I would have, but I finally saw him as a man who gave me everything he had.
Now, whenever I take that first sip from the perfect martini, step onto the paddle board, or place my hands in a prayer position, I remind myself that I am where I am because I had a clear vision of what I didn’t want to be. And sometimes, that can be all you need to find who you want to be in your own life.



