When I was young, the voice in my head was my father’s. You know what I mean – that voice
telling you to handle this situation a bit differently. Such as: ‘make more than one trip’ as I walked by with arms over
laden- ‘you’ll drop something or fall on the stairs’. Or the driving comments- he taught me to drive, you
see. Such gems as ‘don’t follow so
close’ or ‘yes, you have the right away but that guy wasn’t looking. Would you rather be right? or dead?’ I admit that to this day, every time I
take a huge armful of something and carry it anywhere, I think of my dad.
My dad was an advice-filled man and as reluctant as I was to
listen to him, inevitably he was right.
How annoying is that, right?
But I’m showing you my stubborn side now. Later in life my dad found it highly amusing that I fell in
love with another advice-filled man who was inevitably right. Robert was known to exclaim ‘stop
typing so fast- no wonder your hand hurts’ or ‘be careful with that knife- I
don’t want to take you to the ER if you cut yourself’ or, my favorite, ‘why are
you carrying all that laundry in one trip? Put it down.
I’ll take it upstairs.’
See, I really do have a stubborn side. And for the record, I never cut myself while slicing veggies
other than a one-time very small nick.
But, now I hear his voice too, every time I pull out that paring knife
and cutting board. And I think –
gosh, now I’d have to get myself to the ER. I better be careful.
And I picture him in heaven, smiling at me.
As you may have surmised, today is the anniversary of my
father’s passing. Thirteen years
ago he died on the 13th of March. The date is not without some family significance. My parents were married on a Friday the
13th and nearly two years later I was born on a Friday the 13th. My dad always said that day was ‘our’
lucky day – him, mom and me. In
recent years I have begun to wonder how true that is, but I like to cling to my
dad’s belief. As he was
nearing death, he lingered in a coma and passed just a few minutes past
midnight on the 13th.
Coincidence? I think
not.
I remember that week- in the midst of my grief - just knowing that I would spend the
rest of my life and never again would the phone ring and be him. If I was having a bad week, at random
the phone would ring and I would hear Dad’s voice saying ‘I’ve been thinking
about you. Are you okay?’ Or back in the 80s when the Bell Phone
system was in place and they had frequent commercials with people saying ‘I
just called to say I love you.’
Well, you guessed it. My
dad used to do that too. Or
the times he would tell his funny stories- with some facts created out of the
blue with such skill that you couldn’t tell truth from fiction. Consequently, Dad rarely met a stranger
he wouldn’t engage in conversation.
And his utter pride the time I wanted shelves made for this tiny
kitchen cupboard and he made them for me remotely. I measured and told him the numbers over the phone. ‘Yes, I checked them twice’, I
said. Then he cut out the wedges
to hold the shelves and predrilled the holes for the screws. He carefully used his saw and finishing tools to make the shelves. He tossed it all into a box and mailed
them to me. I called him
when it was being successfully put into place. He was so proud of himself that it worked. He had included a mini-level in that
box so I could get the shelves mounted properly and he told me how to use it. I still have that tool in my
toolbox. It was one of the few
that got moved to the condo.
He loved to laugh and spend time together as a family. And when we couldn’t visit – well, he picked up that phone to
check in on his kids. And at the
end of those phone calls, then he would say, ‘Well, Karen Marie, I’m out of
words. I love you. Goodbye.’ Right back at you, Dad.
1 comment:
Such sweet memories. Brings tears to my eyes as I remember Uncle Ron's stories and laugh. Miss him.
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