So here's to the music, Dear Ol' Dad. Some favorites:
- A Boy Named Sue
- The Green Green Grass of Home
- Me and Bobby McGee
- Under the Double Eagle
- Whistling Gypsy Rover
- Wildwood Flower
Playing His Song
Published: Jun 18,
2006 Father’s Day Tampa Tribune
“See the streaks?” my
father asked, pointing at the window. “Do it again.”
I protested since I had
‘cleaned’ half the windows in the house already. He showed me how to buff the
window and I did it right the next time, having learned a tough lesson as a
young child.
Father assigned chores
around the house and we worked at the family business. My brother and I
worked summers there full time and every weekend of our young lives since I can
remember.
One summer I got hooked
on the soap opera, Santa Barbara. My father turned off the TV.
“You’re not going to watch TV all summer. You can sit here and watch
people live. Or, you can get up and live.”
He had similar
expectations for school and everything else: get good grades, work hard
and pay attention. We knew early on that we’d better figure out a way to
pay for college. That was our burden, not his. We both earned full
scholarships to college.
Looking back I’m
grateful for that. His tough love and work ethic taught me a lot about
independence.
But, Dad wasn’t all
work. He read to us often, even in high school, from Kipling to the
Psalms and his own stories. Other times, he’d sing old folk tunes playing
his guitar at bedtime. We fell asleep
with the lyrics and characters in our heads.
In the morning, he’d ask
“What’s the importance of today, March 15th?” We didn’t know
so he’d tell us, “It’s the Ides of March, Julius Caesar’s fateful day.”
He showed us there was
so much to know about the world.
I took my oldest
daughter to visit my parents recently. Exploring the house, she observed,
“Grandpa has shelves with three guitars on them.” A Martin, Gretsch and
Gibson Les Paul filled those old cases.
“Yes, “ I said. “Grandpa’s played guitar all his life and he
played throughout my childhood, just like I play piano for you. But grandpa
doesn’t play anymore.”
My father’s in his
70s. His medication affects his memory and he’s lost a lot of his
balance so he stopped driving this year. He’s packed away the books from his
life and travels; now dust covers the empty bookshelves in his office.
But he works on jigsaws and reads the new books that I send.
I went over to the old
Kimball upright I learned on as a child. I marveled at how much of him
I’ve become as I played tunes for my Dad. Songs he once played for
me.
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