
A Father's Blessing
And he shall go before
him in the spirit and power of Elias,
to turn the hearts of
the fathers to the children,
and the disobedient to
the wisdom of the just;
to make ready a people
prepared for the Lord.
— Luke 1:17
I get a little glum this time of
year. Father's Day is bittersweet. I adored my dad, but he died at age 64. When
my middle-aged friends get exasperated with their aging dads, I get exasperated
with them:
At least you still HAVE your dad, I
feel like saying.
A while ago, I dropped a figurine
that I'd had for many years, and I cried. Not because it was broken into 100
pieces, but because Dad wasn't here to fix it. He had the patience for tasks
like that, while I tend to become . . . well . . . unglued at anything that
takes more than five minutes.
He had his own language: "It's the
dealybob on the thingamajig for a doodlywort." But we all knew what he meant.
He gave us a foretaste of what the
Heavenly Father is like. One time, I was assigned to sweep the garage, and had
done a lousy job. Dad came out to inspect, and instead of yelling, gently took
the broom out of my hands, told me to watch, and finished the job. Within
minutes, he'd taught me how to sweep a deck as clean as a Merchant Marine . . .
which he had been, in World War II, another point of pride for us.
I was one of those mischievous
little girls who often pushed the envelope and often said the wrong thing at the
wrong time. Yet I can remember only once when he physically punished me. This "child
abuse" consisted of being hit over the head with a sack of fresh bread.
We were in the kitchen, making a
Mother's Day breakfast in bed, and I'd been bad. Of course I was far more
shocked than hurt when the loaf conked my head, the plastic burst apart, and
soft pieces of Wonder Bread went flying in every direction. I sank down to the
floor, sobbing . . . but not because he had punished me. Because I had disappointed
him that much.
He was one of those dads who could
do endless things, and loved to share everything that he knew, felt and did
with us.
The best thing about him is how he
would say how much I was like my mother. What a compliment!
I see the same quality in my husband
now. When the oldest was about six months old, he came in from somewhere. She
was sitting there in her "pumpkin seat," and he whooshed in, unstrapped her,
and started throwing her gently up in the air, and catching her.
At the first catch, she looked like
herself.
At the second catch, she still did.
But on the third catch, and
subsequent ones, her chins tucked in, and her eyes nearly disappeared in slits
of laughter, and she was a carbon copy of . . . me.
It was just that way with Dad and
me. He truly made me feel loved.
It goes beyond the grave, too. He
even did it on his deathbed. On our minister's last visit, he told him: "Take
care of SuSu. She's special."
Special?
Special!
What a blessing he left me with. I
don't really feel special, but if Dad thought I was, I must really be.
Of course he knew the minister would
tell me, and it would soften the blow of his death, and be something to cushion
the blows of middle-age today . . . something to hold on to.
It doesn't even matter if it's true.
What matters is that he thought so.
So on this Father's Day, I'm asking
our Heavenly Father to do the same thing for Dad, for the same reason.
Take care of my father, Father, 'til
the day we're sweeping the golden streets together with brooms made of the
Breath of Life . . . because Dad was and is special to me, and more so each and
every day. †