Thursday, May 30, 2019

Eulogy for Father :: Eulogies Eulogy

Eulogy for FatherFor the first time in my life, Ill celebrate Fathers Day this year without my dad. The human beings who had the most influence on the man I became passed away on April 14. Jack was 79.It has been said that the loss of a parent is one of lifes most traumatic events. I now know the devastating truth of that statement. Ive been told that, in time, the hurt will fade, only to be replaced by positive memories that soothe the soul. Already, I can feel that happening.Maybe its because my father and I had a simple and loving relationship. He was a remarkably good man, like many of the inspiring role models and mentors who frequently appear in luxuriant Companys pages. Like them, he was a person of devotion and integrity, a man who understood a hard days work. Yet, unlike most of them, he never had the proceeds of a college education. He worked pretty much his entire life in two places a dye house and a post-office sorting facility.His core accomplishment was family. And as his only child, I was the lucky beneficiary. My father poured vast amounts of love and energy into me during my most formative years. That is why I measure his life in the warehouse of photographs and movies he created for me. It is why I measure it in the size of his hands. Because what I remember most about my father are those sandpaper-rough hands, made furrowed from factory work. From my earliest days, he took my hand in his and we discovered the world together.With his hand in mine, we walked through New Yorks Times Square. We went to Tads Steakhouse, where you could get a T-bone, a baked potato, a hunk of garlic bread, and a tossed salad for $2.79. We went to my grandmothers house on Saturday afternoons for endless games of gin rummy, Parcheesi, and Chinese checkers. We went for long hikes on Sunday afternoons, through the nearby woods. We hitchhiked together. We played music together -- he on a keyboard, me on a drum kit. We strolled the railroad tracks together in Paters on, New Jersey, laying pennies on the rails and waiting for the train to pass so we could use the flattened coins for guitar picks.We fished together, in rowboats, off riverbanks and bridges, in rivers and lakes, with worms and fish eggs, and lures and flies.

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