Glitterbugs: How One Father Picked Up the Pieces After Becoming a Single Dad — Twice (Exclusive)

Mar. 15, 2025

Charles Bock and his new book ‘I Will Do Better’.Photo:Beowulf Sheehan; Abrams

I Will Do Better: A Fathers Memoir of Heartbreak, Parenting, and Love by Charles Bock

Beowulf Sheehan; Abrams

Again? How was I going to do this again?

When my first wife died after nearly three years of fighting cancer, I became a single father. I was bereft to the bone, financially on fumes and became solely responsible for a little girl, Lily, just days before her third birthday. Obviously, this was a brutal situation, but over the next two years, Lily and I — with support from family, friends and therapists — found ways to help and inspire each other; we made our little family cohere — sometimes spectacularly so — in a tiny but rent-stabilized one-bedroom in Manhattan.

I Will Do Better: A Fathers Memoir of Heartbreak, Parenting, and Love by Charles Bock

Abrams

But four years later, my second wife left me. I became a single father once again, with no more financial resources than I’d had before, even more sense of loss andtwolittle girls this time.

True, Lily had to process a second maternal figure’s thorough departure;nonethelessshe would have that oft-requested chance to be a big sister. And the little one would grow up relying on her dad and valuing her sister.This is what I wanted, what I anticipated.

Lily and Ione read together in the sisters' bedroom.Courtesy of Charles Bock

Charles Bock shares photo of his family Ione and Lily

Courtesy of Charles Bock

In the dark stretches before dawn, when I could keep my thoughts from tail-spinning into an alternate universe where I was not doing this Han Solo, I thought up plans for me and the girls, schemes about how to organize our hours. I’m not a taskmaster, don’t believe in charts and am too lax about cleaning to force my kids into chores, so my ideas weren’t draconian. Still there had to be ways to make simple responsibilities fun and to create meal and bedtime rituals, sprinkling them with stardust.

We don’t want to be litterbugs. We want to be glitterbugs.

Adding a letter, great plan. Still, I’d managed to transform my life with Lily into something special, and even occasionally marvelous. I was determined to perform the same magic trick with two kids.

Thus, the rebuild commenceth. True, the walk-up I found for us was above a 99 cent shop and alongside an industrial boulevard. Eighteen wheelers rumbled past at all hours, and masses of unhoused people camped down the street. But the space had lots of light, a cavernous living room, a ton of cabinet space in the kitchen area and full bedrooms at opposite ends — the kind of setup ideal for adventurous art students.

Lily picked the larger bedroom to be the sisters’ room. It overlooked the boulevard, and the ovals from the nines on the store’s marquee peeked up into the window space near her bed. In the hollow plastic of the arcing signage, we found bird nests made of twigs and shredded takeout menus, Cheetos bags, zigzag boxes and bird bones. Odd and slummy, sure, but also kinda badass. Lily pinned above her bed cast posters from her afterschool theater programs. On the far end of that room, I set up for Ione the crib of white slats I’d got from Craigslist. I covered its mattress with a clean, form-fitting sheet. In went a pile of stuffed animals, including the giant Minnie Mouse with Ione’s nameembroidered on its foot, a gift that Lily had paid for with her allowance.

I pushed the wire basket full of our dirty clothes over the cracked and uneven sidewalk, Lily pushed Ione in her stroller right behind me, our rickety parade headed to the laundromat. By the entrance they had one of those ancient arcade games where you put in a quarter and tried to push money over a ledge. We pumped in change and rooted for jackpots that never came, bringing stares from people waiting for their laundry to dry. When a few coins plunked down Lily shrieked, Ione stared, surprised, and then raised her arms and cheered as well.

The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now!

I schlepped them to the local Carvel for single scoops and sprinkles. I set them on the mechanical horse outside the barber shop, pumped in quarters. Sometimes the horse actually vibrated. We ventured to different Bangladeshi bakeries for Rossi, until the girls decided they’d rather have penny candy.  I microwaved them popcorn for Disney videos, blew money I could not afford on pizzas that no one finished. I sang to them, altering the lyrics to eighties hip hop group Whodini’s classic, “The Freaks Come Out at Night,” repeating it so much that both my daughters started chanting along,when fishies get together, to go out at night, they like to wear leather jackets, chains and spikes.

Around my plans to make it happen, love and happiness sometimes sprang up spontaneously. Here is Ione, dark haired curls, pale skin, petal lips, her eyes asking a question, flashing glee at the answer. Here she is bouncing on Lily’s bed. Here they are with helium balloons and stuffed animals from the 99-nine cent store. Lily snuggles with Ione, reads fromLibrary Lion,Ganesha’s Sweet ToothandA Visitor for Bear, some of the same books that I read to her when she was that age.

Ione and Lily in front of a glowing light-up toy.Courtesy of Charles Bock

Charles Bock shares photo of his family Ione and Lily

Ione clapped, started marching

But something in Lily’s face — was she thinking that song was something proprietary? I’d sung it to her countless times in bed, the two of us delighting overchickens just back from the shore.Was she jealous of the attention Ione was receiving? Was she being possessive of me?

“I need to do my homework,” she said.

Ione’s face froze. “Lily?”

“I can’t,” Lily said.

You could see the little sister not understanding, adoring her big sister so much, melting down. Full tantrum mode.

Then one morning, I was going to take Ione back to her neighborhood, and I turned to lock the front door and grab the stroller and Ione, who was halfway down the stairs, tumbled down the last four, causing bruises on her face.

And then one night she successfully climbed out of her crib and fell three feet to the floor and bawled.

One afternoon Lily was in a bad mood and pushed past Ione and accidentally knocked her into a door.

Throughout, the little one’s plea — sometimes thrilled, sometimes dissatisfied, but repetitive, echoing, familiar ‘Lily.Lily. LILY.”

Before the separation, towards the end of my older daughter’s fifth grade year, about five minutes before she was to leave for school one morning, she followed a chaotic impulse and cut off the bangs in front of her forehead and temples. The result was as bad as you imagine. Getting her to class that day seemed a miracle on par with loaves and fishes.

After school, we had an emergency appointment at the neighborhood shop that specialized in kid’s haircuts. The stylist and I had arrived upon a kind of answer, convinced Lily to try a bowl-ish, bang-less version of actress Audrey Tatou’s cut from the 2001 indie hit,Amelie. Lily, seeing the results, had thrown a world-class tantrum, wanting to quit school, threatening to never go outside again, you name it.

Charles, Ione and Lily on the subway.Courtesy of Charles Bock

Charles Bock with his family Ione and Lily

Our path was to follow plans that worked until they stopped working. Then I either pushed through the anomaly, or made adjustments, or gave the f— up and tried something else or I just carried on. I kept pushing the little one on swings, spending so much time pushing her on swings at the local playground that I taught myself to sing the alphabet backwards to her, just to have something for my mind to do.

Meanwhile amid all those broken plans and dead time, sometimes, some glitter, a sparkling.

Lily is a teenager now, Ione a big girl of six. My latest genius move has been to get the girls a little blonde Shi Tzu puppy. They named him Buster. Of course Buster turns out to have been abused, and bonds deeply with me, but barks and flees whenever Lily comes home, and hides whenever Ione tries to pet him.

It’s seemed to me that any plan, strategy, preconceived notion, cheat codes or what have you, has been bound to fail, often miserably. But. But. But. The attempt is all. It’s the only real chance we’ve got. Through presence, engagement and the acceptance that is inherent to love, a familyhasemerged.

source: people.com