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Our Children's Heroes
waited anxiously for my father to come home. I was 11
years old at the time, and I knew he’d be home in a few minutes. Dad
always came home within the same 15-minute window, and he always
had the same routine. He would walk through the open door, hug each of his
kids, and then go find mom. When he saw her, he engaged in “gooey” talk
about how much he loved her.
None of those parts of his routine were of interest to
me. My anticipation was directly linked to the fact that after he had
finished greeting us, he would change his clothes and we would trot across
the street to play basketball. And we did this every day.
I cherished that time with my dad. It wasn’t what he
said to me, and it certainly wasn’t the level of basketball training that
stands out most. It was the fact that he spent time with me…usually 45
minutes a day, sharing in something that I loved.
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I don’t know
when my dad became my hero, but over the years, I’ve given a lot of
thought to how he showed his love.
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When we first began playing together, he would give me
a point advantage to keep the score close.
He was so much better at the game than I was that I
would have been discouraged if he hadn’t. But as the years passed, my skills
passed his, and I needed to give him a point advantage. I remember
how much it meant to me as he would gush over my improvement during our walk
back to the house.
I don’t know when my dad became my hero. Perhaps it was
only after I had children myself that I began to realize what he had
sacrificed, and what it meant to me. Over the years, I’ve given a lot of
thought to how my dad showed his love. Here are some of the ways he did
this.
Time.
Dad gave his time to me. And it wasn’t just leftover time. Dad
sacrificed his prime time for me. Every day, he gave me 45
special minutes shortly after coming home from work. When I became a dad, I
realized what a commitment that was. I knew later that he had just as many
work commitments as I have ever had tugging at him to stay “and get the job
done.” And while those things were important to my dad, they weren’t as
important as spending time with me, my two sisters, and my mom.
Sharing something I
loved. Dad spent his time
with me doing something I loved. Dad enjoyed basketball, but it wasn’t the
obsession with him that it was with me. He never let me know that. I learned
later that his real love was tennis. But he just came out to play
basketball, night in and night out, because it was what I wanted to do. He
loved tennis. I loved basketball. We ended up spending most of our sports
time together doing what I loved.
Conversation.
Dad spent an enormous amount of time conversing with me. When we
were playing ball together, it was easy to discuss the issues of life. This
wasn’t lecture time, not some stilted, artificial, “Son, we need to have a
talk” type of encounter. It was just part of the basketball game.
I still remember some of the lessons that he taught me
on the court. “Son,” he would say, “don’t ever walk an old lady across the
street…unless she wants to go.” This was his way of telling me that when
people don’t want to do something, I shouldn’t force the issue. Or he might
say, “Often wrong, but never in doubt.” This was a shorthand way of saying,
“Before you get too dogmatic about something, make sure you have your facts
straight.”
Some 40 years after those experiences, my eyes well up
with tears thinking about what my dad meant to me. The things he did to
become my hero were quite simple and ordinary, but I know it couldn’t have
always been easy.
Who are your
children’s heroes? You might be surprised. One of them could be you! |