It occurred to me as I was thinking about today's post on kindness (it being Sunday and all), that it was also Father's Day. And while I can always do a post on kindness on Sundays, I cannot always do a post of Father's Day.
Usually when a thought sticks in my head like this, it is for a reason.
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My father TB The Elder and I were, as I thought growing up, little enough alike.
In retrospect - 50 odd years later - I have come to understand that my father and I did not know how to interact with each other. He was man "in the world" as it were, a world of physical labor and leisure sports and working outside and doing things one's self, an extrovert who could approach any situation. I growing up was quite a different sort: quiet, shy, lost in books about fables and fairy tales and fantasy, a child of imagination who excelled at school work but not much else, an introvert who would hide at any opportunity.
Over the course of decades, as I have written here, we came to better relationship place. I learned far more than I realized about his background growing up and how that had shaped him; he was a changed man after a near encounter with death through pneumonia changed his view of life (to be fair, retiring helped a lot as well as much of the "have to" disappeared). He picked up the habit of reading the occasional book, which he had never done when I was growing up; I tentatively wandered into the world of doing some things for myself.
At some point he found out he was depressed - and talked openly about it. I have (and do) struggle with depression as well. We found a point of connection there, even if we never talked about it.
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For all of the fact that my father did not understand what I did all the time, he supported me and my sister in all of our activities (as did my mother). It is quite likely he did not miss a single junior high sporting event for either myself or my sister. No band performance or musical or play went by in high school without him being there. And even when I moved away and out in the world, he checked in regularly as to my activities and how things were going.
His support of my mother in her Alzheimer's diagnosis is also well documented here; from 2015 through 2021 he remained her primary caregiver. He took care of my mother. He learned to do the domestic things my mother had done for years: cooking, cleaning, the finances, even washing clothes - while maintaining the Ranch and ensuring my mother kept contact with others and the firewood was cut high and dry for the Winter.
I could not possibly have had a better long term example of what being a father and husband is, even with his flaws (which, as his son, I carry too).
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I know not everyone has the same privilege that I had to have a good father as a good provider and example. And I know that in some cases, others have stepped in when their own fathers could or would not: uncles, cousins, the fathers of friends, coaches, bosses, even sometimes random strangers. Sometimes these men had a reason through blood or relationship; sometimes it was simply the right thing for them to do.
They, too, should be honoured on this day.
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It is easy to feel sometimes that fathers are overlooked in the modern world. Oftentimes, at least to me, it seems that they are less acknowledged and less seen, demonstrated no more clearly than in the differences between Mother's Day and Father's Day. Mother's Day is advertised weeks in advance and has all kinds of gala and fanfare and a multitude of ways to honour and celebrate her. Father's Day tends to end up acknowledge the Friday before, usually with gift suggestions of grilling equipment, sporting goods, or the ubiquitous tie.
Which is a shame, really.
Good men need good examples - maybe not perfect ones to be sure, but good ones. Ones that are around more often than the snippets of entertainment that we so often consume now. And that can start with -at least in my view - good fathers.
So if you are a father, or have acted like a father to someone one, Happy Father's Day. Keep on keeping on, knowing that you are making an influence, even if you do not always feel it.