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Encouraging fathers, one heart at a time

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).

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November 2024
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S. Peter Lewis

Christian, husband, father, friend, and founder of The Dad Story Project

My string of days

  • I BECAME A SON:
    23684 days ago
  • the father of a son:
    14584 days ago
  • the father of a daughter:
    11702 days ago
  • a grandfather:
    4171 days ago

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The girl in the crowd

[This first appeared in my hometown paper, The Bridgton News, in the spring of 2014]

On paper I am the dumbest person in my family.

Although I have a college degree, my son (the marine engineer) is twice as educated as I am, and my wife (the nutritionist) and my daughter (the exercise physiologist and soon-to-be physical therapy assistant) both have thrice the post-secondary schooling.

I’m not ashamed or threatened by any of this, of course, because I have no problems with insecurity — plus, I’m losing my hair, which helps.

It does, however, make it more logical (in a Spock-like sort of way) for me to handle the less intellectually stressful jobs around the old homestead, such as scooping up the gooey entrails of dead rodents that the cats drag in and eviscerate in the hall closet.

I’ve tried to put an academic-spin on some of the more pedestrian household chores, to make them more palatable to those whose diplomas have finer filigrees than mine, but it doesn’t really work. My son does not fall for calls for help regarding fluid dynamics and the relationships between viscosity, velocity, matrix composition, and orifice diameter (a plugged toilet); my daughter will not help me by personally experiencing the metabolic changes in fast-twitch tissue triggered by verdant truncating (mowing the lawn); and my wife certainly isn’t fooled by pleas for assistance in reorganization efforts following post-masticatory entropy (straightening up the kitchen after supper).

In every household there are the thinkers and the doers, I suppose. (On this claim I would get substantial pushback from the collective familial science eggheads, protesting that they both think and do, which I agree they do do, rather well actually. And just so you know, that is the first time I’ve managed to get do do into a column in eight years — not for lack of trying, I’ll tell you.)

Anyway, our daughter was the most recent to obtain her sheepskin, and so a couple of weeks ago our whole family made the long schlepp down to Liberty University in Virginia to watch Amanda receive her BS, along with about 20,000 of her best pals (yeah, the place is enormous).

The main ceremony was held at the university’s outdoor football stadium, a vast mixing bowl choked to the rafters with a cohort of young, smiling, and mortarboarded humanity, plus parents, siblings, and other assorted hangers-on. It was bedlam, and drizzling slightly.

We got to the shindig rather late and couldn’t get a spot in the stands. (Really? You had trouble with traffic and parking? Hmm.) Security was ubiquitous and snug and at one point, excited beyond recognition, I slipped through and ambled my way up to the top of a grassy knoll to get a better view. (My wife will tell you that I bolted past security, but she is prone to hyperbole; she also sometimes overcooks pasta, by the way).

Before me on the grass of the stadium floor lay a vast maelstrom of knowledge, organized in ranks and files, each candidate decked out identically, carrying a heavy debt load, and facing frontwards toward the governor of Louisiana, who was speaking vigorously. A video stream of his speech was being projected behind him, and his head appeared about the size of a UPS truck.

Nearby on the knoll, a husband and wife earnestly searched for their offspring among the seated throng. “I wonder where she is?” the dad said. “Who knows,” said the mom, sporting a little attitude. “For all we know she’s not even down there. Maybe they’re all rentals.”

Amanda had told us that she would tie a balloon to her elbow so we could find her, but it was clear that school security wouldn’t allow for such shenaniganistic displays of individuality, so she just blended in like a grain of sand at the beach.

But it didn’t matter to me. I knew that my beloved was down there somewhere within my field of vision — that her beautiful countenance was somehow dancing in my eyes, even though I couldn’t pick her out on my retinas. And so I just stood there and proudly wept. I was experiencing one of life’s greatest joys, exulting in the success of others. And this was particularly joyful because the object of my delight was flesh of my flesh. And if a stranger had come up just then and asked, I would have pointed and said, Oh, yes, my precious daughter is right there. She’s the one with the black gown and the square cap. Look, you can even see her gold tassel.

 

A long for the fork

A long for the fork

High from the north the new summer dawn slants in early, golden and burning above the distant ridge and slicing through a muggy haze over the meadow and blazing in through the window, streaking and glinting across the top of our dining room table.

I bought the table sixteen years ago, new but unfinished, sanding it for hours, kneeling low to eye its surface for every imperfection, running my hand over the things I couldn’t see, then sanding again.

I didn’t stain it, but left it natural, having on good authority the trust that over time it would deepen and darken under all the layers of clear finish. And deepen and darken it did, richly into shades of russet and copper and bronze and gold.

At first it was perfect, flat and shiny, without mar or ding or scratch. But that didn’t last. Life happened on that table, particularly when our children got their hands on it. My son and my daughter, homeschooling for a decade, a bit cavalier with sharp and pointy things and only dimly aware of the value of time and fine furniture.

Dents from dropped forks and carelessly tossed calculators, stains from drink glasses, staple dings, the crisscrossed and indecipherable ghosts of handwriting pressed through thin paper, the word “List” discernible but with nothing under it, scratches from objects slid, pinpricks from compass points, faint knife scores, tiny round shotgun impressions from a tattooing pen during a physics test, and a host of other and sundry blemishes, nicks, whorls, and ingrained flourishes.

And then the children grew and fledged and left, off into the world discovering their own lives and sanding their own tables.

The house is quiet now. My wife and I alone, growing old together. Just as it should be.

In these childless years it has become my barely-conscious habit to run my hand along the southwest corner of that old table as I pass by. And sometimes, when the low light arrests me in my traverse of the dining room and all those life-marks rise up and glint at me, I stop and kneel low and eye that roughened plane and run my hands across the lovely imperfect surface. I’m so thankful that I never gave into the annoyance that triggered the temptation to refinish the old table.

It reminds me of the beautiful monologue of Craig Morrison in the sweet movie Still Mine, as he reminisces about the dining room table he built.

“Well, there were a lot of times I regretted not making that table out of oak. But as the years went by the scars added up. The imperfections turned that table into something else. That’s the thing about pine. Holds a lot of memories.”

The last time I caressed my table was three days ago, very early as a pewter dawn reddened the east. I stood still with my hand resting on that faintly battered surface as the breathless quiet ebbed about my knees. And I longed for the clatter of a dropped fork.

Waving at the offspring

Waving at the offspring

I thought I was alone in the house that evening so when I went in to take a bath I closed the curtain around the tub but left the door half open. I’m lying there, gently simmering with a good book, and my 21 year-old daughter just barges right in.

“Oh! Hi Dad.”

“Yikes! I’m naked!” I shout from under the suds.

“Um, considering where you are, if you weren’t naked, I’d be concerned.”

And then Amanda just sits down on the toilet lid and we spend the next twenty minutes talking about her day through a plastic curtain with butterflies on it. And then mom comes home and she’s all happy and her and Amanda go off into the kitchen to do something and I hear them jabbering away and laughing and pots and pans and utensils clattering and I forget all about my book and just listen; and then I climb out and dry off and get dressed and go out to join them.

Two nights later I’m sitting on the couch with Amanda and the TV is on but we’re not even watching it. Our legs all tangled together. Just together. Just talking. It’s about one o’clock in the morning.

“Oh, Mandy, after tonight this won’t be your home anymore. From now on you’ll just be a visitor.”

I’m a little choked up because she leaves in just a few hours to go off to New York to get her second college degree and, well, that just seems like it.

“Don’t worry, Dad, I’ll be back.”

And then my daughter smiles at me.

And I smile at her.

And we both secretly know that the other person’s smile is probably pretend.

Seven hours later Amanda’s car is choked full of twenty-one-year-old-college-girl-stuff and she is sitting in the driver’s seat with her left leg out of the car and her foot still planted at home. I’m kneeling next to her on the garage floor with my right arm around the small of her back and she drapes her left arm over my shoulder. I’m telling her all sorts of important things, like how often to get the oil changed, and then we just talk about nothing for a few minutes and then we pray together and then I start to get up but she pulls me in and hugs me and we say “I love you so much” a bunch of times and then she lets me go and lifts her foot off the ground and backs her car out of the garage and drives off into her new life.

I’d seen this little one-act play before. After our son, Jeremiah, graduated from college in 2007, he was home for just two weeks and then one day him and I are out on his boat on the lake and the phone rings in his pocket and he answers it and is just standing there holding his fishing rod and says, “Oh, wow, yes, I can do that!” And three days later he’s off to the airport so he can go to his new job working the oil fields in the Gulf of Mexico. He visits us every month now, and brings his wife and new daughter.

You grow them up so they can go off on their own, and then you know they’re ready and you think you’re ready and then off they go and you find out in that burning instant that they were ready but you were not. And then you’re just sitting there thinking about your kids and typing away as fast as you can and trying to keep up with your pounding heart. But you can’t. And so you just stop and sob a little. Thankful for the time. Wishing there was more of it. Knowing there can’t be. Knowing that there isn’t supposed to be, and full of the peaceful assurance that God knows what He’s doing.

I’ve stood in the middle of the road twice now, waving my arms and jumping up and down until the glowing tail lights disappeared around the distant corner by the field where we used to pick blueberries when the kids were little.

That’s just about all I can take.

My daughter, my son, my friends.

Optimism defined

Optimism defined

My son and daughter are two of the most optimistic people I’ve ever known. Hold on, that’s not right—they are without a doubt the most optimistic people I’ve ever known.

Year’s ago my son (the engineer) was up for a big promotion at his company, but he didn’t get it. There were some internal politics going on and a bit of weirdness and it wasn’t really handled fairly. I talked to my son shortly afterward, and he was understandably disappointed, but then he said to me, “You know what, dad, I’m going to work tomorrow as if I got that promotion anyway and let them all see it, and maybe next time….” And next time most certainly came—he was recently promoted to the highest level of his profession!

And just two days ago I got the following text from my daughter (the poverty-stricken college student): “Hey dad, I need rent money for tomorrow. Sorry. I hate to ask. 😥 ” And after my wife transferred in some money we realized that after paying her rent our daughter would only have $0.16 left in her account. My wife mentioned that to her, and our daughter said, “That’s sixteen cents more than I thought I had!”

Isn’t it wonderful when your biggest role models are your own children?

(In the pic above, the overly optimistic ones are on the outside edges, framing our family with happy expectation.)

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