There is something deeply wrong about people deciding what matters to you after you have already told them clearly.
The furniture my dad built for me was not abandoned. It was not forgotten. It was not “up for grabs.” I stated from the very beginning that it was mine. I said it the day of the move. I could have loaded it up and taken it home immediately. Instead, I was told Mom needed familiar things around her and that having those pieces there would help her feel safe and comfortable during such a huge life change.
So I trusted them.
I left pieces that my father made with his own hands because I was trying to think about someone else’s feelings during an already painful time. I chose compassion and understanding. Apparently that consideration only went one direction.
Because later, when there “wasn’t enough room,” nobody called me. Nobody asked me to come get my things. Nobody stopped for even one second and thought, “Maybe we shouldn’t donate the furniture her dad built for her.” They loaded it up and gave it away to strangers like it had no meaning at all.
Then came the excuses.
“It was stressful.”
“There wasn’t room.”
“It’s already gone.”
Funny how people always find explanations after they’ve crossed a line they knew they shouldn’t cross.
What I still have not received is accountability.
No real apology.
No ownership.
No acknowledgment of how deeply disrespectful it was.
And what makes it even worse is hearing that someone thinks I only cared about the furniture because I somehow believe it could “bring Dad back.”
That statement honestly says more about them than it does about me.
No, furniture cannot bring someone back. But valuing something a person made with love is normal. Protecting something your father spent his time, talent, and heart creating for you is normal. Wanting to keep something meaningful instead of watching it get dumped at a Goodwill in another town is normal.
What is not normal is treating someone else’s grief and memories like an inconvenience.
What is not normal is donating handcrafted pieces made by someone’s deceased father without even giving them the chance to pick them up.
And what is really hard to swallow is realizing that the people who did it still seem more concerned with defending themselves than understanding why it hurt me in the first place.
The furniture mattered because HE mattered.
Every scratch, every board, every hour he spent building those things carried part of him with it. Those pieces represented love, effort, family history, and memories I can never recreate. Once they were gone, they were gone forever.
You cannot replace handcrafted pieces your dad made for you with an apology that never came.
I think what hurts most is realizing that people who claim to love you can still completely dismiss your feelings if acknowledging them would require admitting they were wrong.
And I am tired of being expected to quietly accept that.
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