My father died last
night, after ninety years of life. I will miss him, but I will always carry pieces of him deep
inside me. It was not until his
death, that I realized what some of
those pieces were.
Five months ago on
his ninetieth birthday, my sister sent
me a computer file of pictures of my father to incorporate into a slide
show. A few months later I realized I had missed several folders of
those files, including pictures of his
college and army years.
It was an
eye-opener. Dad was thirty when I was born.
Mostly I remembered him as a grey-haired and serious; world-weary and
strong; honest, quiet, and upright. I
never saw him young until I looked through those pictures.
They revealed a
different side of my father--a goofy looking kid standing next to his uncle in
worn, sepia photo, polishing a college car with his schoolmates, and making hee-haw faces. slouching outside a tent in World-War II next
to his mess mates, looking young and small next to his bigger buddies, looking like he had just stepped off the
tractor--which he had.
There was one
picture that particularly caught my eye. He was in his uniform, arm on his knee, staring off into the
distance, smiling confidently. There was
something arresting about his smile. He looked as though he was getting ready
to take over the world--a strong, confident smile on his lips, his low-lidded eyes staring off into the
distance like a mariner about to sail around the world, full of hopes and
dreams. It was then I realized how much
like my father I was s at that age, loaded with dreams, curiosity, and hope.
Dad served in the
war, but he never saw combat. He was
training troops in Europe as a prelude to D-Day when he stepped on a stray
bazooka shell, leaving him with shrapnel in his legs for the rest of his life,
and two years of his life spent in a
hospital in England. At one point they
wanted to cut off his legs, but he fought back and went on to live a full,
non-handicapped life.
Dad came home to
Hartwell Georgia, where he won the heart of the prettiest girl in town, his
wife of sixty-three years. They had two
children, Debbie, and of course myself, Junior.
He gave us a stable home, paying our way through college, and providing
us with the best life we could ever
want, with great effort and expense. Then,
when we got married and had children,
he lived in committed passion for his wife, his children, and his
grandchildren. He was happiest when he was with us. He was saddest when any one
of us had the least bit of trouble. He
lived his life for us, and we loved him for it.
But these old
pictures revealed something more,
particularly in that picture of him staring off into the distance.
All his life, I
believe Dad wanted more. He had the mind of a thinker, the heart of an
explorer, the passion of a painter, and the soul of a hero. He was a quiet, powerful man, living an unnoticed life of
quiet bravery. But he wanted something
more, for himself and his family.
Dad was a
sharecroppers son, the first of his family to
go to college. He become a textile engineer. Then,
taking an opportunity for advancement, he left Hartwell for a succession
of better jobs--first in Williamston SC, then in Knoxville, Nashville, Memphis, Birmingham, and Atlanta. He went into the insurance business, then
into sales, and finally in sales management.
We hated moving.
Being uprooted hurts, but it made us, in many ways. It helped us to see that
following our dreams meant sacrificing our comfort for something else. He taught us not to settle for the ordinary,
but to look higher and better. He taught us by showing us.
Dad was not a
teacher. We learned by watching him and what he did. He did not teach us much about God, but he
lived for God. He did not teach us to
work hard, he just worked hard in front of us, and we learned to follow him.
I do not think that
Dad achieved all he dreamed of in his youth (no one does), but for a good reason. He gave himself so we
could be who we are.
Dad was not a
teacher--but his daughter and granddaughters are. He was not a preacher, but I am. I preach
because of what he taught. He was not a
writer, but his son and grandchildren write books. He was not scientist, but
his grandson is studying for it.
Dad got to visit
many parts of the world, but thanks to him, his children and grandchildren have
stood upon every continent on earth. He
achieved a good life for himself and mother,
but his example and their sacrifice opened the door for their children
to do more, be better, and rise higher than he did. In the end,
I know that this is what Dad the proudest.
So how do we
remember a man like Dad? If we want to
remember our father, we don't do it by
looking back at him, but by looking out into the distance, looking forward. My father never wanted to be an idol to be
worshiped, but a foundation stone for all our lives.
We come from our
parents--but we live for God. We come from our past--but we live for the
future. We remember my father by living out his dreams, the way he lived
out his, in the choices we make, In the
ideals we follow, and in the dreams which carry us on.
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