When you are 17 and in your senior year of high school,
certain things take on added meaning. A
few weeks ago, when Tyler’s basketball team played their arch rival, he tweeted
“People don’t realize how bittersweet events like that game are. For 2 hours we are a linked community. Seniors may never feel that way again.” That rivalry game was a big deal. The crowd at the game was the biggest all
season.
Of course, the game that seniors think about and remember
the most is the last home game of their senior year. That one is truly bittersweet, as they know
it will be the last one they ever play as a team or on any team, for that
matter. On February 3rd,
while overwhelming Hazel Park High School in a game, Tyler injured his
hand. The next day he tweeted “Senior
year and my hand is injured. #unlucky”.
Since then, X-rays revealed that the index finger of his shooting hand
was fractured. His season is cut
short. The Hazel Park game was the last
game of his senior year. He just didn’t
have the benefit of knowing it, thinking about it, or savoring the moment.
I suppose that a broken finger and a few missed games is not
a big deal in the whole scheme of things.
But certainly Tyler is disappointed.
As a father, you don’t like to see your kids feeling that way. You certainly don’t like to see them
injured. Feeling a little sad for Tyler,
got me to thinking about my dad, that and the fact that his birthday is coming
up. When you are a kid and bad things
happen, you mostly think about yourself.
You don’t really wonder how it makes your parents feel. Then you become a parent and you find out
what it is like, first hand, seeing you child hurt and disappointed.
When I was 10 years old, I was diagnosed with Legg-Perthes
disease. It is a childhood hip disorder
initiated by low blood flow to the ball of the upper leg bone. The bone dies and stops growing. You find out about it because you experience
excruciating pain in the hip. Continued
weight on the bone, causes it to deform.
Thus, that leg becomes shorter, in my case, by an inch or so. The treatment in the 1960s was to place the
leg in a sling and walk with crutches, so you don’t put weight on the ball and
cause further damage. Eventually, in my
case about 16 months, the bone re-hardens.
Of course, you kind of have to learn how to walk again, though a little
lopsided. And for the rest of your life,
that deformed ball tears away at the cartilage in your hip joint, leading to
osteoarthritis. A hip replacement is in
your future.
So, I was feeling a little sad about Tyler and it suddenly
hit me. How did my dad feel when I was
screaming in pain? When I had to use
crutches all that time? When unused
muscle began to atrophy? Well, I can’t
remember him saying much of anything about it.
But, if I feel a little sad about Tyler’s finger and 5 or 6 basketball
games, what must he have felt. It kind
of explains why over the years, whenever we met, or talked on the phone, he
would always, without fail, ask the question “how’s your hip?”
In a few days, my father will have a birthday. He is into the second half of his 80s. He and my mother live in a retirement complex
in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, near my sister Connie. So, we don’t see them a lot. With one son in college and the other in high
school, the opportunities to make the 12 hour drive, or cost of a flight, make
it difficult. We talk on the phone every
couple of weeks. He and my mother share
a cell phone. Whenever I see that
incoming number come up on my iPhone, I wonder if this will be the call I don’t
want to get. Face it, there are only a
small handful of people that really care whether you ever existed on this
earth. It is not fun to think about
losing one of those.
My sisters and I were lucky to have our dad. Many kids don’t grow up with one, or what
they get is kind of sub-par. We grew up
in the 60s and 70s. Back then, our
mother was a home-maker. She worked real
hard, but nobody gave her a paycheck.
Our family’s income came from dad.
And dad was a factory worker. I
am not sure how he did it. I know he worked a lot of hours. He was gone before we got up for school in
the morning. He wasn’t back until dinner
in the evening. He worked 5 or 6 hours
on every Saturday. For 13 years after
high school, I worked in factories. It
was tedious, boring, dirty, and totally unrewarding. I have no idea how you could do that for all
the years he did, and know that you needed all the hours you could get in that
place, in order to support your family.
I can’t remember him ever complaining.
And, I can’t remember really feeling like we had less than anybody else.
Just because he worked in a factory, doesn’t mean our dad
wasn’t smart. Perhaps, he could best be
described as wise, the wisdom being gained through tough experience and hard
knocks. Things he told us and advice he
gave served us well through the years.
We still ask for it on occasion.
I am pretty sure I remember my sisters and I always calling
him “daddy” when we were little. Even, I
think, not so little. Something like
that becomes an unthinking habit. I
remember driving from their home in Machesney Park, IL out to mine near
Shirland one day. So, that would have to
be when I was in my mid-twenties. I was
remembering a conversation we’d had that day and it suddenly struck me that I
had, at that age, still said “daddy”. I
felt totally embarrassed. How lame and
childish was it, that I was still calling him that at my age. I never said that again.
As I mentioned, my dad worked a lot of hours. He did find time, once in a while, to go
fishing. Fishing is one of the things he
enjoys the most. I liked to go with
him. We caught some fish, but a lot of
times we just sat on the shore or in the boat for hours, and nothing happened. I don’t think that catching anything was ever
really the point. It was the “being
there”.
I remember being at church when I was a kid. I think it might have been a Bible
study. The topic came up “what will the
kingdom be like”. Some may refer to it
as heaven, others the after-life, but we thought of it as “the kingdom”. Dad told everyone that he thought there would
be streams and lakes and he would be out there fishing. Logically, that may seem weird. You don’t have to eat, so you don’t need the fish,
and there shouldn’t be any killing there anyway. But, to dad, I think that made perfect sense
because he was thinking in terms of “what is the most enjoyable thing I can
think of doing for eternity”.
When he was younger, Tyler used to be curious about
metaphysics. That is defined as
“philosophy concerned with explaining the fundamental nature of being and the
world that encompasses it”. He had lots
of questions like “what is really there” and “what is it like”. So one day, when he was 7 or 8 years old, he
asked “what happens when you are dead?”
So I explained how some think you just cease to exist. Forever. Others believe there is some type of
after-life, or heaven, or kingdom. And
then I told him how grandpa Scott thinks he will be fishing. He replied, “so if I die, I should find out
where the good fishing spots are, so when grandpa gets there, he will know. And I’ll find a baseball diamond so I can
pitch”. That works for me. I can’t think of much I’d rather do for a
really long time, than fish with my dad, and watch my son play baseball.
It is interesting how these random thoughts about your dad
seem to pop into your head on almost a daily basis. Many experiences with sons relate back to
something similar that happened in the past between you and your own dad. You
remember what he said or did that somehow stuck with you through all the years. They are things that seem to define who you
are. If you are a good father, it might
be because you learned many things from your dad. There are always a few things you discard, or
strive to make better or do a better way.
Most of dad’s lessons were those that didn’t need changing.
Thanks Daddy
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