Father

...It's been a while since I've wanted to write this, but only until now do I know how to do so. Sometimes I remember glimpses of things we did together when I was very little. It's almost like a dream, but I know they are real memories. You probably don't even remember and have forgotten them along with many other things.

Unfortunately, what I remember most about you when I was growing up was your absence. Mostly I fill the void with memories that never happened. Those chats at the dinner table that never happened, those words of advice I never got from you but so desperately needed, your jokes I never heard, and of course the wisdom you never shared with me.

I wonder if you ever knew what I felt when I lost my first tooth, or how I would have loved to have your loving arms pick me up as my attempts at learning to ride a bike ended abruptly with my meeting the ground head on time and time again.

I ask myself if you would have been proud of me for finally having learned to read on my own, or learning to ride a horse, or swim. It's sad to know that the man who gave me life knew nothing about me, my dreams, my fears, my successes, and my failures.

Comments

The Good News said…
This Father's Day.. the Lord lead me to Joshua chapter 4 verses 4-7, talking about the children that would ask about the meaning of the 12 stones, a heritage a culture that the fathers would have to pass down the history of our forefathers.Then Joshua called the twelve men whom he had appointed from the children of Israel, one man from every tribe; and Joshua said to them: “Cross over before the ark of the Lord your God into the midst of the Jordan, and each one of you take up a stone on his shoulder, according to the number of the tribes of the children of Israel, that this may be a sign among you when your children ask in time to come, saying, ‘What do these stones mean to you?’ Then you shall answer them that the waters of the Jordan were cut off before the ark of the covenant of the Lord; when it crossed over the Jordan, the waters of the Jordan were cut off. And these stones shall be for a memorial to the children of Israel forever.”-Joshua 4-6 It's not new that generations of children ask their fathers or parents about their pass. Like Charles Drew an American physician, surgeon and medical researcher known as the inventor of the blood bank.Dr. Daniel Hale Williams, who performed the first prototype open-heart surgery.Garrett Morgan,an inventor who made both the first traffic signal invention and the first patented gas mask. I could go on, Joshua makes sure God's answers are given in Joshua 21- 24 Then he spoke to the children of Israel, saying: “When your children ask their fathers in time to come, saying, ‘What are these stones?’ then you shall let your children know, saying, ‘Israel crossed over this Jordan on dry land’; for the Lord your God dried up the waters of the Jordan before you until you had crossed over, as the Lord your God did to the Red Sea, which He dried up before us until we had crossed over, that all the peoples of the earth may know the hand of the Lord, that it is mighty, that you may fear the Lord your God forever.”
The Good News said…
Some fathers unfortunately relate to their children through conditional love, which says, I love you if . . . , when . . . , or but . . . . Unconditional love, on the other hand, says, No matter what you do or how often you make bad choices, I love you. Even when we disapprove of behavior or hairstyle, our love never changes.
The Good News said…
..It's been a while since I've wanted to write this, but only until now do I know how to do so. Sometimes I remember glimpses of things we did together when I was very little. It's almost like a dream, but I know they are real memories. You probably don't even remember and have forgotten them along with many other things.
Unfortunately, what I remember most about you when I was growing up was your absence. Mostly I fill the void with memories that never happened. Those chats at the dinner table that never happened, those words of advice I never got from you but so desperately needed, your jokes I never heard, and of course the wisdom you never shared with me.
I wonder if you ever knew what I felt when I lost my first tooth, or how I would have loved to have your loving arms pick me up as my attempts at learning to ride a bike ended abruptly with my meeting the ground head on time and time again.
I ask myself if you would have been proud of me for finally having learned to read on my own, or learning to ride a horse, or swim. It's sad to know that the man who gave me life knew nothing about me, my dreams, my fears, my successes, and my failures.
The Good News said…
What brought tears to my eyes...my children said to me..Dad we don't just love you..we like you..we like who you are.
The Good News said…
My dreams would include, Daddy coming home after a long hard day bringing goodies from the five and dime store to his precious little ones. The bedtime stories, he would tell us over and over again..just because we knew it was your special time with Daddy. The hours on the lake, trying to catch the big fish..the one that got a way.. but any way it was a great day. Sunday morning flapjacks, Daddy specialty that he would away make. Even when hard times came, and Daddy could not afford to get us that new bike..he would scrimp and save..with his overtime pay. Yes..I would cherish those precious dreams...
The Good News said…
"During very difficult times, my father would go to a corner in front of the living room every morning and read the bible and pray on his hands and knees and when he came up from there..there was this glow about him and such a great change in him. He did not need to preach to me I witnessed it and I wanted it. No amount of preaching or teaching can match this discovery found in experiencing that relationship with the Lord. Realizing that stumbling, failure, trials, sorrows all will happen but when my hope is in the Lord I find a place of rest under the shadow of His wings."🙏🤲

Popular Posts