Saturday, June 15, 2013

Father's Day

I'm so glad when Daddy comes home- glad as I can be! 
Clap my hands, and shout for joy, and climb up on his knee; 
put my arms around his neck, hug him tight like this; 
pat his cheeks, then give him what? A great big KISS!

It's a classic. Tomorrow my Primary kids will sing that song in Sacrament meeting, because what would Father's Day be without Sunbeams blowing Great Big Kisses from the stand and giggling? But I hate dragging all the kids up on the stand for one 14-second song and then sending them back to their pews, so I needed to pick another one. I went through all the "Daddy" songs in the Children's Songbook and wasn't impressed- I knew my mom had a couple of great Father's Day pieces... but not for Primary kids. I searched Jackman and everything in my (very limited) personal music library. Finally I had to go back to the Children's Songbook to decide which additional piece I disliked least. Leafing through, I stopped on a song entitled "Grandmother" and read through the words and decided that was the one. Replacing the title with "Father," of course. Here are the lyrics:

You give me a kiss,
You give me a hug,
You smile when you see me too!
I wish every child in the whole wide world had a [Father] just like you.

You read me a book,
You sing me a song,
You whisper you love me too!
I wish every child in the whole wide world had a [Father] just like you.

I'll try to be good,
I'll do as I should,
I'll whisper I love you too!
I wish every child in the whole wide world had a [Father] just like you.

This world needs good dads. Desperately. So many torn families- so many youth without positive male influences in their lives- so many children who so desperately want and need their fathers to wake up and be men. It makes me so grateful for the good dads that ARE out there. Dads like mine. Dads like Kyle.


I am a bit of a daddy's girl. Ok... I am a LOT of a daddy's girl. As a child, I thought my dad was the greatest person in the world. As an adult, well, I haven't changed my mind. I was also a fairly over-sensitive child, and my beloved daddy was a fairly scatterbrained person. I remember once I had failed to check to make sure I had tights for church on Saturday, and thus discovered I was tightless on Sunday. In summertime, or a state other than Colorado, this might have been ok, but in this situation, it was not ok. My dad had to go buy me tights before church. He dutifully went without saying anything that would increase my already intense guilt about being the cause of my dad breaking the Sabbath and returned... with footless tights, accidentally. And my mom and sister teased him. And my heart broke. It was my fault- he had to break the Sabbath AND he had to be mercilessly mocked for it!

Of course, what I didn't realize was that he took teasing just fine. I had to grow up a little bit to realize that. It was all in good fun, and I don't think his eternal salvation was threatened by buying his little girl tights on Sunday. But I think that experience- that fierce desire to defend my dad- my overwhelming guilt at having caused him pain- and the fact that I still remember the feeling today- are evidence of a crucial role my dad has played in my life, all my life. I love him so much, with adoration he earned by being amazing, that I can't bear to hurt him with my choices. This made a difference he doesn't even realize, later on.

It was a life-saving inspiration. It's something that happened that I'm not even sure if anyone but he and I know about, til now. My dad was not the disciplinarian in our home. Maybe it was because of his very long work hours and church obligations, maybe it was my eagerness to please him, but I recall being chastened by my father maybe twice, as a child. I'm positive that's why this particular incident resonated so intensely:

Years ago, when I moved back in to my parents' home in an effort to get clean, I lacked guidance in how to do it. No state rehab program would take me without a guaranteed source of exorbitant amounts of money and I knew nobody who had been on and then off drugs for reference. So my method of detox was to hide in my parents' basement. If I had cravings I couldn't manage, I would find someone online who would share or trade. If I couldn't find that, I would drink. The whole process was agonizing. One Saturday night I spent in company with a large bottle of rum. By morning, the rum was gone and I was... well, pretty far gone too. My family was at church, and I thought I was alone, but I heard someone coming downstairs. To my surprise, it was my dad. And he came down and launched into a tearful, pleading lecture about alcoholism. I sat in stony silence, so angry at whichever of my siblings had tattled on me (that was how I assumed he knew- maybe that's true, maybe not. If it's true, and that sibling happens to read this... thank you for tattling.) and so annoyed that I, an adult, was being lectured by my father. And then he went back to church.

I got in the shower. And the reality of what had just happened punched me in the gut like an iron fist. My dad left church to come home and say what needed to be said and infuriate me. He had to know that would be the effect, considering the person I was at that time. He could have waited until after church, instead of interrupting his meetings. But he came when he needed to come, not knowing that I had another bottle and no reason not to drown in it, and said the hard things I needed to hear. I sat on the floor in the shower and sobbed through the pain of hurting my dad. Of disappointing him, of worrying him. I think I spent two hours in that shower. It was very cold by the time I got out. And then I got the other bottle of rum and poured it down the drain. I didn't quit drinking then, but I quit drinking alone. And I started to realize that someone I admired and adored still loved me enough to risk making me hate him.

The world needs dads who play with their children. Dads who talk to their children. Dads who read to their children. Dads who give their children time- which is what most children want more than anything. The world also needs dads who will do the hard things. Who will say things that make their children furious, but need to be said. Who will refuse to enable and refuse to support bad choices. If every child in the whole wide world had a dad like my dad, oh what a world this would be.

My dad was and is a monumental influence in my life, but of course he isn't the only dad who affects my everyday existence.

When I found out I was pregnant, Kyle and I weren't married. He'd only just realized he loved me, and we were very young in our relationship. He was in the Delayed Enlistment Program for the Air Force, set to go away to train as soon as he was called. We were both unsure whether we even wanted children, let alone together. I had no idea how he would react to the information that we had created a baby (especially knowing that I would choose to keep the baby, regardless of his reaction, even if that meant the end of us) and honestly, he could have gone either way. I was terrified. I thought he would probably have a panic attack, not know how to react, not know how he felt about it, and I would have to leave and wait for him to come around or be done with me. The conversation went as follows:

H: "I'm pregnant."
K: "What? How."
H: "Well, when a man loves a woman..."
K: "No I know that. Well ****. Ok. Well, you don't want to get rid of it, right?"
H: "No."
K: "Well I guess we're having a baby then. We should probably start working on getting married."

And from that moment, he wanted a baby. With me. Because there was a baby coming, and he was responsible for it, and therefore he would choose to want and love that baby. Six months later, he was called up to leave for Basic Training. We (newlyweds of 11 days) went to the hotel he was ordered to, the evening before his swearing-in in Denver, and I booked a room there so we could spend as much time together as possible before he left. He had been assigned a separate room and another recruit with whom to share it, but the desk clerk looked at my gigantor belly and said "You're checked in, as far as I'm concerned that means you're here- go sleep in your wife's room." He woke up very early the next morning to get ready to join his group at the shuttle to MEPS, and before he left the room he kissed Damien through my belly and cried (don't tell Hulk I told he cries) over the unborn child who, six months prior, before he knew he existed, he wasn't sure he wanted. That's a daddy.



Kyle is not a perfect father. There's no such thing, on this Earth. But he tries. He tries ever so hard. Even when it hurts. I've watched him make changes to his life and standards. I've watched him dig deep into his past and recognize influences that were harmful to him, and resolve to vehemently protect our children from those things. I've watched him make choices he didn't want to make for the sake of our kids' happiness and comfort. I've watched him apologize to Damien when he's made mistakes. If every child in the whole wide world had a dad like Kyle, oh what a world this would be.

I am blessed to have had these fathers in my life. When I choose songs for my Primary kids to sing, I have an obnoxious need to select pieces with which I personally identify. I know I can teach better when I believe in what I'm teaching. That's why when I read the words of "Grandmother" (Grandmothers are awesome, sorry for stealing your song!!) it had to be the one. I love children, mine and otherwise. I want every child to feel happy and loved and valued and safe. If I could make one wish, it would be that every child who lacks a positive paternal influence in his or her life, for whatever reason, could have one just like either one of the most important daddies in my life.

Here's one more pic, just for the sake of awesome. :)


1 comment:

  1. I'm so glad we got to have dinner with you the other night. I hope we can become better friends. (Also, I enjoy reading your blog).

    =)

    ReplyDelete