Peter’s Blog
I’m actually right-side up in this photo, it’s our yard that’s upside-down (which explains why my hat doesn’t fall off).
I see a happy trend…
Things are looking up! (For anyone who knows me, that’s pretty much how I feel every day.) But right now I’m talking specifically about the awesome initial reactions to the Exploding Cat book. Thirty-three reviews so far and they’re all 5 stars! And some of the reviews are from people I don’t even know (which eliminates the possibility of bribery)! Thanks everyone. Please like this or share it or tweet it, or do any of those social media things to help me get the word out. I just want to encourage dads!
Jelly Bean Sprouts & Whopping Amphibians: Sticky Sweet Memories
EDITOR’S NOTE: For reasons of full disclosure, the story that follows is from my daughter, Amanda. That’s us, above, during a trail run when she was a junior in college. Her story was unsolicited. No, really. I was going to ask her and my son to write guest posts, but hadn’t gotten around to it yet. She dashed it off while in the midst of getting her second college degree. I have no idea where she found the time to do this. One of the key parts of the story has to do with rescuing amphibians on country roads at night in the rain in the spring—this is totally legit, and it’s called Big Night, and it happens all across the northeastern US. You can find our more by clicking this link to the local organization that helped us learn all about it. And even though Amanda has been away from home for the last four Big Nights, I still go out, for old time’s sake…and just because it’s really cool. The best thing about my daughter’s story (although I could be a bit biased) is that she somehow credits me with helping her become a confident and competent adult by burying candy in the yard. Hmm, all along I thought I was just being her dad. Can it really be that simple?
By Amanda Lewis
From a very young age, I remember playing alongside my father; he was always working hard. He was tilling for the new garden, helping my brother build some contraption, cleaning out the old shed, building me a playground, re-doing the green house for mom etc. I remember him always covered in wood shavings from sawing things and he always smelled like damp dirt. He would constantly be storing a pencil behind his ear, measuring something, losing his pencil, muttering about the measurements, taking his narrowly-molded baseball cap off [see photo above], wiping his hands on his jeans, getting frustrated about losing his pencil, putting his hat back on his head, and finding said pencil right where he had left it—behind his ear. This may sound like any typical hard-working father, constantly on the go while his daughter watches, idly playing nearby and seemingly bored. But let me tell you how my dad was different.
My dad wouldn’t just work hard, he took breaks hard too. In the middle of building me my “castle” [a big, complicated playground gymnasium thing] he would take breaks to take me fishing. And by taking me fishing I mean he fished, let me haphazardly cast, and hold the fish after he took it off the hook. He also let me take a couple home so I could swim with them in my kiddie pool. (Don’t ask what happened to them. I guess swimming in the mud caused from the overflow was not their forté). There were many days he would take me down to the creek so I could wade in and try to catch “swimmer bugs,” those weird bugs that seem to float and swim on top of the water at the same time.
One day, after handing my dad screws and nails while he worked on the greenhouse (I could be remembering this wrong, I was probably about five) he asked me for help with a couple of flower beds in the front near the driveway. I remember looking at his hands covered in black soil with black lines in the creases and under his nails and then looking at my smaller ones to see a matching set. He went into the house and came back with a bag of jelly beans. He said we were planting “magic jelly beans.” I remember just wanting to eat them, but he told me if I was patient, my hard work would pay off. So we planted the “beans.” The next morning I woke up and he asked if I had checked on the flower beds, because something might have grown. I raced outside to check, hair sticking up in all different directions, barefoot in my Little Mermaid pajamas. And what do you know; our “magic jelly beans” has sprouted—into HUGE lollipops! It was magical.
Fast-forward seven years. I am twelve, and despite being a middle school girl, I still enjoy playing with snakes and frogs. There was an ad in the paper about an “annual amphibian migration” followed by “how you can help.” My dad thought it sounded “Wicked cool!” so “We have to go!” We went to the volunteer meeting, where we were told what conditions were needed for this migration, how to help the salamanders and frogs cross the road to get to their mating grounds, and how to handle them properly. My dad, a friend, and I were so psyched! My mother thought we were all crazy. Then finally the night came—perfect conditions (frost out of the ground above 55 degrees, raining, sometime roughly around April). We set off with our flashlights, driving slow, squinting hard, hopping out at every possible sighting (even if it was only a leaf), finding “whopping” [large] spotted salamanders, and measuring the really big ones. This continued the next year (with another friend and her adventurous father manning the tape measure), and then continued just the two of us all through high school. The first year I was a freshman in college my dad still went out, partly for tradition’s sake, partly to beat the “whopping spotter record” from last year, and partly because I know he missed me. I kept getting picture messages on my phone, making me wish I was there to see the “whoppers” he had recorded this year. I showed some friends, having to explain our “tradition.” They thought the whole thing was rather weird. I just scoffed, rolled my eyes, and said, “You just don’t get it.” And they didn’t; they still don’t.
My dad has been many things. He has been my father (in my opinion, the best father in the whole wide world), a father to many of my friends, my teacher, my spiritual adviser, my biggest fan, and my role model for my future husband (As you can imagine this weeded out a large number of prospects. I now have extremely high standards because I was raised knowing I deserved only the best. I know, I sound like an uppity snot, but hey, blame him, not me). But among all these roles my dad has played, my dad has always been, and will always be, my best friend—my partner in crime. It’s nice knowing that if mom is going to scold me, I won’t be the only one getting scolded (usually).
So thanks dad, for always taking time out of your busy day for me, for always taking care of me. Thanks for planting those “beans” with me when I was still very small, so they could sprout and take root so I can now stand on my own, and enjoy the “lollipops” I’ve worked so hard for. And thanks for not only steering me towards an amazing guy, but also being there for that amazing guy once I found him. I love you so much. P.S. I know, I know—there’s probably a whole bunch of misplaced commas, and it’s over 800 words, but at least you taught me how to use semi-colons and em dashes. Deal with it!
Barn Boots
Portrait of father and daughter (dad is on the left)
From: THE DAY WE BLEW UP THE CAT: And other stories from a normal childhood
Volume 1 in The Dad Story Project series
By award-winning author S. Peter Lewis
Download it from Amazon for just $0.99
Barn Boots
I walked out into our meadow on a recent morning to hear the news from the dawn birds and check the dew. I start most summer days this way and recommend it—goldfinches and robins spread unbiased cheer better than CNN, and droplets condensed out of the night sky lubricate the day better than drive-through espresso.
As I swished out through the tall, wet, green of the morning, I came upon a swathe of mowed grass that began near the barn and ran southeast for fifty feet before stopping dead at a clump of goldenrod. Later, while pouring milk over crackling cereal, I asked my family about this mysterious swathe. My wife, Karen, just shrugged, but when my daughter Amanda heard the question she slumped against a nearby wall and hung her head. “Oh, yeah, I tried to mow the meadow,” she said. “But it was too hard.”
“For the horse?” I asked.
“For my horse,” she said.
Five years ago, when Amanda was just eight years old, she asked us to get her a pair of barn boots for her birthday. I appreciated her request, since I’m a barn boot-man myself—sliding my feet deliciously into my black LaCrosse rubber boots most mornings between the opening day of mud season and mid-summer. Barn boots represent real work in a world where many of us (this writer included) earn a living by clicking a mouse. (At the end of most of my work days all I track into the house are stray nouns and dangling participles, but after hours in rubber boots I clump in mud balls, lawn clippings, and damp nasturtium blossoms—evidence of real toil.)
So, when her birthday arrived, Amanda opened an oddly-shaped package wrapped in the latest edition of the local paper, and her eyes opened wide and bright. She slid her feet into her new barn boots, hooked her finger at me, and said, “Follow me.” Out in the yard she pointed at the house and said, “farmhouse,” then pointed at the barn and said, “barn,” then down at her boots and said, “barn boots.” Finally she pointed at herself. “I guess I need a horse,” she said. Clever girl.
Amanda’s first barn boots led to a fine collection of animals living in practically every corner of our property, including fish, snakes (sometimes coming into the house one in each hand, “Dad, open the door, quick!”), hermit crabs, mice, rats, hamsters, guinea pigs, chinchillas, rabbits (don’t ever get two rabbits), cats, sheep, and finally, goats. With each passing year the animals in Amanda’s collection got bigger and required more attention, and every couple of years she outgrew a pair of barn boots.
But her dream of a horse didn’t come true. The barn needed renovation, fencing needed to be installed and a corral built; but money was tight and her great dream always had to be put off. Amanda is patient, and she enjoyed working in the barn with her menagerie, but I could see the longing in her eyes when she looked out at the old pasture next to the barn. And on the day she went out into the meadow with the mower and tried to conquer the long grass, I realized she was just trying to keep the magic arithmetic going: farmhouse, plus barn, plus barn boots, plus a mown meadow, equals horse.
Later that evening I took the mower out into the meadow and began to push. The grass was tall and the going was hard and sometimes my barn boots slipped on the damp ground—but little by little I extended Amanda’s swathe. Back and forth I cut, the soft, wet smell of progress hanging in the air, until a bright green rectangle began to take shape. I looked up once and saw Amanda watching me from a window.
When I finished, Amanda came out to meet me and we sat together on the granite steps of our old farmhouse. “Gosh, Dad, you did a lot,” she said. I took off my glasses and wiped my sweaty forehead with the sleeve of my shirt. “Someday you’ll get your horse, Mandy,” I said. “Until that great day, whenever you see your papa out there fighting back the goldenrod, you’ll know that he hasn’t forgotten your dream.” My daughter smiled and laid her head on my shoulder and we just sat there for a few quiet moments admiring her future Arabian prancing out in the freshly mowed meadow.
Sometimes all it takes to keep a dream alive is to cut a little grass.
Stepping Up: a new ministry from Dennis Rainey
Dennis Rainey, founder of Family Life Today has launched yet another powerful ministry—Stepping Up—which takes dead aim at manhood: husbands and fathers. Play the video and get ready for the good kind of goose bumps.
TDSP 2-4: The Shooting of Rusty, 1, 2, 3 - The Dad Story Project
An innocent foray into raising chickens leads our family down a sinister path as our rooster slowly goes insane. Danger lurks around every corner until we no longer bear it and drastic measures must be taken. And while things end with a bang (seve...
Recent Comments