Jimenez76

From the Home Front

Remembering Dad

By Jane Jimenez
June 15, 2006

My father has been gone for more than 10 years. It seems like yesterday; I miss him still. 

He was a father from the “old school,” an outdoorsman who took me out one freezing morning on a duck hunting trip. At 12 years of age, I felt honored that he trusted me enough to know I would be quiet and still along the river bank. 

As Father's Day nears, memories build of little things with big consequences. Daddy loved order and strategy. An electrical engineer, he had a system for ordering 1,000 pieces by their bumps and slots, an assembly-line method for putting puzzles together. Today, my color-coded filing system owes everything to Dad. 

Perfectionists to a fault, both of us, we had our fair share of rows. Particularly vivid is one battle where we locked up in an argument over how to slice Mother's homemade bread without leaving any breadcrumbs on the wooden board. The battle turned into a war, complete with slamming doors and morning apologies. Funny today and fiercely serious back then. 

Poor Daddy. He often joked about being the only man in the house surrounded by women. When my mother took a college class on semantics and discovered an additional set of connotations and denotations for every word in the English language, she tripled the words at her disposal for overwhelming him in conversation. It was the ultimate Mars/Venus communication gap before John Gray was around to explain it.   

Remembering Dad, I wish every kid had a father close at hand to create good memories.  

Today, statisticians are explaining why we need fathers. The value of dads is computed in statistics of crime, risky adolescent behaviors and economic well-being. Researchers are trying to appeal to our logic, arguing that families benefit from fathers, from dads. 

Why? What do numbers have to do with explaining the longing of the human spirit?  The value of my Dad is more personal than that, impossible to quantify as a statistic. 

If I have had any success in being a parent, I can look to my Dad and the sacrifices he made to be a husband and father. When family life is tough, I hang in there because my Dad gave me a vision of tenacity and hope. When I look for strength inside, I find it because my father put it there through his affirmation of me as his daughter, worthy, capable, and loved. 

Dad's encouragement, his example, his love can never be replicated by social programs and tax dollars. No number of psychologists, teachers or federally-funded initiatives would ever have filled the shoes of the man who loved my mother and spent a lifetime building a picture of that love in the daily details of life. 

I need no research to prove the value of fathers for raising daughters and sons. The proof is written on my heart. It is honored in passing on the gift of marriage to our own children.   

He's been gone all these many years. But he's never left me -- my Dad. 

Happy Father's Day!

Copyright © 2006 Jane Jimenez           

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