Truro News

Together at long last

Father meets the daughter he never knew he had.

- BY ANDREW RANKIN

Imagine you’re a father of three grown kids, a grandfathe­r of three, you’re thousands of miles from home at a remote Northern B.C. constructi­on camp, and you get a Facebook message from the daughter you never knew you had.

Well, if you’re Darryl Chetwynd, you try not to get too excited. The Nov. 12 missive was brief.

“Hi Darryl. My name is Becky. My mom is Holly, and I thought I’d message you and say hi.” Chetwynd’s mind was racing. Just six weeks ago he was at his Port Hastings home when he received a similar brief, and potentiall­y life-altering, Facebook message from a long-ago girlfriend, informing him that they had a daughter. She was trying to track him down but was offered no means of contacting his daughter.

“I had butterflie­s, of course, and I was wondering ‘is this for real,’” recalled Chetwynd. “But she’s the spitting image of one of my daughters and I just knew she was mine.”

Inside a half hour of getting that first message, he responded, eager to apologize and compensate for the lost years.

In those subsequent rapid-fire messages, plans were being made. Later that evening they talked for hours over the phone.

Less than a week later, on Friday, they met at Halifax Stanfield Internatio­nal Airport.

“We hugged right away,” he said. “I feel like I missed out on 31 years of Becky’s life and it shouldn’t have happened. I want to give her what I can as a father. Now I have four children and five grandchild­ren. I think that’s just great.”

Same goes for Becky Myers. The 31-year-old Barrington Passage resident was adopted at birth.

She was 18 years old when her birth mom finally told her the name of her biological father. With no other details she tried to track him down, phoning every Darryl Chetwynd in the phone book. She never gave up.

“The moment he walked through the security doors it was like everything stopped. I was hoping that I wouldn’t throw up. I wondered is he going to be as excited as I am? But it played out perfectly.

“The first thing I said was, ‘Hi dad.’ The rest I can’t remember.”

Myers wrestled with the prospect of contacting her dad by way of Facebook, worrying about how he might receive the startling news.

“Either he’s going to love the idea and he’s going to be completely for it, almost like that story book perfect ending. Or, it’s going to be, he reads the message, ignores it, and we never speak again. Luckily that didn’t happen.”

Over the years, there were many occasions when Myers longed for his presence.

“The birth of my kids, any time a boy broke my heart, graduating from community college.”

Saturday essentiall­y played out as a kind of meet and greet. Myers travelled to Halifax with her boyfriend. There she also met Chetwynd’s daughter, Candace, and the foursome went for breakfast. They shared a few jokes, kept things light and, after a couple of hours, parted before making plans for a Christmas family get-together.

His family is all in. Chetwynd’s two sons, who are working with him out west, are already making plans to meet their sister in the coming weeks. Chetwynd’s wife and mother are ‘tickled pink’ about the prospect of an added family member.

“I’m 50 years old now and I’m hoping I have a few more years left because family is everything to me,” said Chetwynd. “I’m just grateful that she never stopped looking for me. We just click.”

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 ?? CHRONICLE HERALD PHOTO ?? Becky Myers, 31, met her biological father Darryl Chetwynd for the first time at Halifax Stanfield Internatio­nal Airport on Friday.
CHRONICLE HERALD PHOTO Becky Myers, 31, met her biological father Darryl Chetwynd for the first time at Halifax Stanfield Internatio­nal Airport on Friday.

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