كنّا أربعة على طاولةٍ واحدة: كوبان من الشاي، وقلقان، وجهاز تحكُّم يتيم يتنقّل بين أيدينا مثل قضية عائلية لم تُحسم. ضحكنا على مشهدٍ تلفزيوني، فصرخ الأب من الغرفة المجاورة كعادته: «ما عندكم مخ؟ ما تفهموا ولا تفكروا؟!».
لم يرد عليه أحد. ليس خوفاً، بل لأننا فهمنا الرسالة: الفرح ممنوع ما لم يصدر بختم الأب.
كبرنا...
ولم نكن ندري أن بعض الآباء يربّون أبناءهم ليكونوا طبعات باهتة من قسوتهم ليس إلّا، ثم يشكون من بهتان الطباعة!
كانت الأمّ تحاول ترقيع الشقوق بصوتها الناعم، لكن الصوت الناعم لا يقاوم منجنيقاً من الأوامر الصارمة. كنّا نعرف ترتيب البيت من ترتيب الأهواء. الأكبر مدلّل لأنه على صورة الأب. الأصغر مظلوم لأنه يشبه أمّه في طيبته، وأنا... كنتُ حيادياً جداً، لذلك كنتُ في مرمى الطرفين.
مرّت سنوات، وسافرتُ. وجمعتُ من الاغتراب ما لم أجمعه من الدفء. تعلّمتُ كيف أشتري وردة، وكيف أعتذر، وكيف أتكلم دون أن أُقاطع. وحين عدتُ، رمقني باندهاشٍ وهو يرى ملامحي أكثر ليونة، وهمستي أكثر دفئاً، فسألني باستنكار خافت: «ويش فيك وويش صاير لك؟!».
فأجبته وأنا أحدّق في عينيه التي لم تعتد النظر طويلاً: «مو صاير شيء يا يبه... بس قلبي تعافى شوي من القسوة التي كسرته، وصار يعرف يحبّ، مثل ما كنت أتمنى تحبّني في يوم».
قال أخي الصغير: «أبتِ، أريد أن أدخل قسم الرسم!».
فقال أبي: «إن دخلت قسم الرسم، سأرسم على جسدك شوارع بالعقال!»، فدخل بناء على رغبة أبيه الطب، وأصبح طبيباً نفسياً... يعالج أبناءً كبروا على القمع، ويربّتون على قلوبٍ لم تُربَّ إلا بالتوبيخ والتحكم!
الرسّام.. طبيب نفساني
15 أغسطس 2025 - 02:31
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آخر تحديث 15 أغسطس 2025 - 02:31
عماد آل عبيدان.
تابع قناة عكاظ على الواتساب
*عماد آل عبيدان
We were four at one table: two cups of tea, two anxious people, and a lonely remote control passing between our hands like a family issue that had not been resolved. We laughed at a television scene, and the father yelled from the next room as usual: "Don't you have any brains? Can't you understand or think?!".
No one replied. Not out of fear, but because we understood the message: joy is forbidden unless it is stamped by the father.
We grew up...
And we did not know that some fathers raise their children to be nothing more than faded copies of their cruelty, and then complain about the dullness of the printing!
The mother tried to patch the cracks with her soft voice, but a soft voice cannot withstand a catapult of strict orders. We knew the order of the house by the order of the whims. The eldest was spoiled because he resembled the father. The youngest was wronged because he took after his mother in her kindness, and I... I was very neutral, so I found myself in the crossfire of both sides.
Years passed, and I traveled. I gathered from exile what I had not gathered from warmth. I learned how to buy a flower, how to apologize, and how to speak without being interrupted. And when I returned, he looked at me in astonishment as he saw my features softer, my whisper warmer, and he asked me with a faint incredulity: "What's wrong with you? What happened to you?!".
I answered him while staring into his eyes that were not used to looking for long: "Nothing happened, Dad... it's just that my heart has healed a bit from the cruelty that broke it, and it has learned to love, just as I had hoped you would love me one day."
My younger brother said: "Dad, I want to join the art department!".
So my father said: "If you join the art department, I will draw streets on your body with a headband!" So he entered medicine at his father's insistence and became a psychiatrist... treating children who grew up under oppression, and comforting hearts that were raised only with scolding and control!
No one replied. Not out of fear, but because we understood the message: joy is forbidden unless it is stamped by the father.
We grew up...
And we did not know that some fathers raise their children to be nothing more than faded copies of their cruelty, and then complain about the dullness of the printing!
The mother tried to patch the cracks with her soft voice, but a soft voice cannot withstand a catapult of strict orders. We knew the order of the house by the order of the whims. The eldest was spoiled because he resembled the father. The youngest was wronged because he took after his mother in her kindness, and I... I was very neutral, so I found myself in the crossfire of both sides.
Years passed, and I traveled. I gathered from exile what I had not gathered from warmth. I learned how to buy a flower, how to apologize, and how to speak without being interrupted. And when I returned, he looked at me in astonishment as he saw my features softer, my whisper warmer, and he asked me with a faint incredulity: "What's wrong with you? What happened to you?!".
I answered him while staring into his eyes that were not used to looking for long: "Nothing happened, Dad... it's just that my heart has healed a bit from the cruelty that broke it, and it has learned to love, just as I had hoped you would love me one day."
My younger brother said: "Dad, I want to join the art department!".
So my father said: "If you join the art department, I will draw streets on your body with a headband!" So he entered medicine at his father's insistence and became a psychiatrist... treating children who grew up under oppression, and comforting hearts that were raised only with scolding and control!