Showing posts with label Snap shots from Fathers Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Snap shots from Fathers Day. Show all posts

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Happy Fathers Day!




My Dad was a church guy. Back in the day in the 1960's you basically had two different types of Dads. The ones who would go to church with the family and the ones who stayed home to watch TV. Now a church going Dad might not go first thing in the morning. My Catholic School had mandatory 9AM mass for all the kids where attendance was taken during the school year. So usually your Mom took you or you went with a group of kids from your block with one or two Moms watching over you. The rest of the year you could go anytime you wanted. I thought I was cool stuff when I went to the 12:15 mass with my Dad. Most of the fathers would be at that Mass and then would either go home for Sunday Dinner or go to their club to play cards or whatnot. My Dad would introduce me to his friends who were at Mass. They were all dressed in suits and ties and wore fedoras like they were on the Untouchables or something. That's what it meant to be a grownup. You wore a suit and tie and a hat to church.

He never missed a Mass on Sunday. Rain or shine he would get dressed and go. He was a big wheel in the Knights of Columbus, the Parish Council and the Holy Name Society. Since he was an accountant he always would have people who had questions about taxes or a letter or something and he would help them out. They would stop him in the street and he always had time for them.

You see the thing was he always had time for me. He would take me and my buddies up to Yankee stadium even  though he was a big Met's fan. He would use a weeks vacation to go with us to Boy Scout Camp at Ten Mile River. He was always there if one of the other kids had something they needed to talk about and didn't want to talk to their own Dad about.

Today in Church Father Chris had all the fathers stand up and get a hand from the congregation. There were a lot of guys with their families. But also a bunch of guys by themselves who were my age. They proably went to church with their Dad and kept it up even after he had passed. Fathers Day is a great day to go to Mass and celebrate your Dad.

I think of you every day Daddio. Happy Fathers Day.

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Snaps shots from Father's Day!


My Daddio was a big Mets fan. He was a Dodger fan when the Bums skipped town just about the time I arrived. So he grew up a National league fan and transferred his allegiance to those lovable losers the New York Metropolitans.

When you are a kid you love your Dad but you have to establish your own identity. So often times you argue with him about sports and tell him his team stinks. That's how I became a Yankee fan. Now he didn't care and took me to Yankee stadium to see the 1961 team with Mickey and Whitey and Yogi and Moose and all the rest. I went to a game where Johnny Blanchard hit two home runs. It was one of my favorite memories of childhood.

But he stuck with his Mets. Then the Yankees started to stink and he would razz me especially in 1969 when the Miracle Mets started their run. He loved to get a six pack of Reingold and a veal cutlet sandwich and some fries and sit back and watch the game. Now we lived in an apartment and my Mom really didn't like to entertain all that much except for family. But every once in a while they would have someone over. One night we had some people over who lived across the street. My friend Nicky was the same age as me and his sister was the exact same age as his sister so our Moms would always walk to school together and stuff. So their family came over one night for dinner. And as we used to do in the 1960's the women went into the kitchen and the guys gathered around the TV console which was a huge wooden box. There was a little back and forth but my Dad said "Cut the crap we are watching the Mets." So we put the game on and they were playing the Cubs and Seaver is pitching. And pitching well. Pitching a no hitter in fact. Until the ninth inning when Jimmy Quals broke it up. Saved at the last minute. I didn't want to have to hear about how great the Met's were all summer. Of course I had to listen to it when they won the series.

Every year on Father's Day I honor my Daddio by watching the Mets and rooting for them one day a year. I get a sixpack of Reingold and take his place. But I can't do that today because they are playing the Yankees. Santana vs Sabathia. So I will have to do it on his birthday. I know he would understand.

I love you Daddio. Happy Fathers Day in Heaven.

Happy Father's Day!


To continue a Father's Day tradition I hope youse guys will write a short reminiscence of your day and I will happy to front page it with an appropriate illustration. We kicked it off with a great story by Michael H below.

If you are too busy or just want to enjoy the day....well Happy Father's Day!

Snapshots from Father's Day!


Michael Hasenstab said...
My dad and Fred McMurray attended the same high school in Beaver Dam, Wisconsin. My dad knew McMurray fleetingly (there was a age difference) and whenever I asked about McMurry, the answer I'd get was always "he was a stand-up guy."

My old man is still alive. He's 86 and let's himself into my house a couple of times a week; usually to drop off a magazine he thinks I'd like, bring a sub for lunch (at 9:30), or just talk. I'm always glad for the company.

Three years ago at Father's Day he gave me two brown mugs; plain, unadorned. I said thanks, of course. He said let me tell you about these mugs. Here's his story:

"In spring of 1942, I was fresh out of basic training for the Navy and home on leave. I knew that I was going to be shipped out for Guadalcanal that summer. Guadalcanal was going to be rough, a lot of guys weren't going to come home from that one.

"My dad had stomach cancer. Medicine back then wasn't what it was now, and we knew he had a hard fight in front of him.

"Either way, we thought the day I left would be the last time we saw each other on earth. My old man brought these two mugs home from work. (He worked as a brewmaster at the Pilot Brewing Company in Beaver Dam). We sat down at the kitchen table, filled the mugs, toasted each other and drank.

"sat there all night, an old man dying of cancer and a kid going off to war. We talked about life, our neighbors, how hard it was to scratch out a living as an immigrant, women, living a good life, how to beat my brother at sheepshead, and everything else we could think of to avoid talking about what was ahead.

"I left the naxt morning, on a bus for the Navy base in Waukegan. I hugged my old man, hard, before I got on the bus. he hugged back and said "I'll see you again.""

"I shipped out in June, 1942. The battle began in August, 1942. I received word in December that my old man had died.

"After the war I met and married your mom. A few years after you were born, your grandmother gave me these mugs to keep. Now they're yours. Go have a beer with your son."

I have them now, kept safe where they won't break, to be handed down to my son after I've passed.

Happy Father's Day, Dad.

Saturday, June 19, 2010

The best father son show on TV today!


The best father and son show on TV features two fathers and sons. Or rather a father a son and a grandson. It is "Pawn Stars" on the History Channel.

It Rick Harrison and his son Cory "Big Hoss" and his dad "The Old Man." The relationship is a joy to watch as Rick is the tough but fair Dad who teaches his son how to rip off the poor suckers who come in to sell their family treasures because they are on the balls of their ass. But the Old Man is the best. An ex navy man he is the perfect old Cumdegon and he barks at everyone. The relationship with his grandson is a pisser as they bust on each other back and forth. It feels so real. It is how a lot of regular men relate to each other.

This is the real deal. It is a reality show based on a real business and you can see everything from bonding moments to big screw ups. In the end they unite on the one thing that is really important: making money.

The worst father son show on TV.


There is no doubt in my mind that the worst depiction of the father and son relationship is the basis of one of my favorite new shows; Justified.

In this modern day western, US Marshal Raylan Givens (Tim Olyphant from Deadwood) is a quick draw artist with a huge body count. I think he killed at least two people in every episode. His daddy Arlo is a career criminal who still lives in his hometown of Harlan Kentucky and just got out of prison. After killing a drug dealer in Miami Raylan is transferred back home where he has to deal with his dad and all his ghosts. Raylan is also in a deadly conflict with an old friend from work Boyd Crowder played by the superb Walter Goggins from the Shield. Boyd has a conflict with his Daddy Bo who runs the drug business in Harlan and employs Raylans dad as well. Bo even arranges to have Arlo set up his son to be murdered in the season ending episode.

But I don't want to spoil it for you.

If you get a chance to watch it in repeats or On Demand then you really should take the time. It's is as close to a Western as you are going to get today and the father and son dynamic is very compelling.

I know some of you guys said that you didn't have a good relationship with your dads, but you have to go a long way to match the guys on this show.

Why do the people who write TV shows hate Dad?


You know that they do. If you watch TV at all these days you know that the father in any sitcom is always a figure of ridicule. A moron. A weasel.


A prime example is the Jon Cryer character in "Two and a Half Men." He plays the dad of Jake the "half man". Alan (his character) sponges off of his rich brother Charley played by Charlie Sheen. Alan is an ineffectual dofus who has the right ideas about parenting but can never put them into practice because he is always undermined by his castrating ex-wife or the smart mouthed housekeeper or his playboy brother who teaches his nephew how to be the poster boy for "The Smoking Gun." I mean it is a familiar set up for TV. Two bachelors raising a kid. Like "My Three Sons" or "The Courtship of Eddie's Father" or even fucking Bonanza for that matter (Ben and Hop Sing were a couple by the way). But in all of the earlier sitcoms the dad is never the dickhead that he is made out to be today.


What a load of commie bullshit.

Happy Fathers Day!


It will be Father's Day tomorrow and I want to wish all the fathers a great day. I hope you all get some "Old Spice" and a burned pancake breakfast cooked by your kids.

They don't make Dads like Steve Douglas anymore. Where is the TV show where a Dad loves his kids and is reasonable and fun. I think the only one that shows a "Real" Dad is Modern Family where you several real "types" of Dads.

You have the type of Dad like me in Ed O'Neil who is a blustering well meaning old school pop. A disciplinarian but someone who you know loves you.

You have the Dad who is goofy who wants to be a pal to his kids but has a good heart.

And you have the two gay dads who together make up a whole.

But you know Steve Douglas was all of those people in one.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Get the shovel.


I once said to my dad "Why are you so mean to me. You never see Ben Cartwright treat Hoss this way."


He thought about it for a minute and said "Ok come with me." He took me to the stables where the vegetable guy kept his horse that pulled the cart down on Bond St by the Gowanus canal.


We went into the barn and he handed me a shovel. "Here, shovel all the shit out those stalls. That's what Ben used to tell Hoss all the time."


I didn't complain all that much after that.

Friday, June 26, 2009

The worst movie dad of all time!


The worst movie dad of all time was Michael Caine in "Blame it on Rio"

In this marvel of witt and sophistication, Michael Caine and his buddy Joe Bolongia decide to go on vaction to Rio with their nubile daughters Michele Johnson and very young Demi Moore pre breast implants.

Required viewing for all you perves.

Learn what not to do on vacation with your buddies daughter.

I wish someone had shown this to Governor Sanford.

PS I shrunk the photo but you get the idea. Links not safe for work. Or if your wife is in the room.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Snap Shots from Father's Day

Amba said:

Among other things, it's good to be reminded not to take for granted having honorable and loving parents.


My father was the quieter, handsome, self-effacing older son of a gentle father and a spirited, spitfire mother. His hotshot, blond, WASP-y looking 2-yrs-younger brother, who was on track to be a Jewish Kennedy (was a Liberal student leader at Harvard, which was like being SDS in the mid-'60s; was a protegé of the Roosevelts, offered a govt. internship that would have spared him serving, which he declined) called him "the gentle Puritan."


The great tragedy of my father's life was the loss of his brother. Alan, a pilot in the Naval Air Force, died in a test-piloting accident in Florida, trying to save the plane instead of bailing out when the landing gear jammed. My dad accompanied the body back from Florida to Chicago on the train, with a bottle of whiskey to numb and release him. He'd been married to my mother for a year at that time. They saw "Casablanca" the night before his brother's death, so he never wants to hear "As Time Goes By" again.


My father had always said the one thing he didn't want was to be the last one of his family left. And that happened. Both his parents died within little more than a decade of his brother, seven years or so apart, both at age 67. My father went on to surround himself with a large family (see the last picture here and as if he'd paid in advance, he has been blessed in every way since.


Knock on wood, spit three times, no tragedies, addictions, or even disabilities. Some near misses, most notably his own: at 67, right on schedule, he began to have a massive heart attack; fortunately he was on the surgical table being prepared for a bypass, the drastic blockage of 4 of his coronary arteries having been discovered almost by chance the day before.


Now he's 91!!! Jewish families are often matriarchies (possibly because -- going way back -- when you live surrounded by somewhat hostile majorities, it's not safe for the males to be boldly assertive; those males get killed off). Ours was no exception. When we were kids my dad was self-denying and emotionally controlled, like many men of his generation, and to some extent he expected the same of us. Our mom was a volatile spitfire, like his mom. But we always knew that underneath he was the steadily loving one. And in the years since his bypass, that has come out in the wide open. (Bonus: Mom has grown into much more than just a diva, too.)


They still have each other. We still have them -- more than ever. So lucky.

Snaps Shots from Father's Day


Pogo said:


My own dad worked his ass off raising 13 kids. We were no end of grief to him, what with half of that group coming of age in the late 60s-early 70s.


One of my favorite memories: He would come home from his job as an industrial engineer (whatever the hell that was) and he would show us a trick. He'd take a colored piece of paper, write down someone's name on it, tear it into shreds and swallow it and act like it was working its way down to his fat old stomach. Very dramatic.


He'd open his shirt and pull out the same balled-up colored paper from his belly-button, once again all in one piece, name on it and all!Woo hoooo! How'd you do that?!?, we'd ask.


Years later I realized he must have sat in his office chair, putting a wad of paper in his belly button, just to do that trick when he got home.


That's love.


Hey I am going to try that trick tonight with my granddaughter. Except I have enough room for the Declaration of Independence in my belly button.


She has to learn her American History early.

Monday, June 22, 2009

Snap Shots from Father's Day


chickenlittle said:


Just back home from having fun being a dad.


My father was born at home on a farm outside of Richland Center, WI in a house his father built. He was the 3rd in a family of 8. The family farmed, but couldn't make a go of it during the Depression. There was work to be had in the town though so the family got by. I would love to have known by grandfather, but he passed away when I was three.


My father had a Walton's like childhood, and very happy by all accounts. He and his 4 brothers were all too young for WW II, but came of age just in time for the Korean conflict. His oldest brother was drafted and served in combat. My dad was drafted after high school and spent two years driving tanks, guarding the German/Czech border. A younger brother went to Germany too.


After his service, he returned to his home town and worked odd jobs before starting an apprenticeship as a printer. He started dating my mother (5 years younger) while she was in still in high school, and they married a month after she graduated and turned 18. They left their hometown for a better job for him, but didn't really go far. My father worked for the newspaper in Madison and my brother and I grew up in the nearby town of Middleton.


My dad never really cared much for his career as a printer: his real passion was scuba diving. He got into the sport '50's when it was still a new sport. He ran a dive shop out of our house growing up and gave lessons. Chances are if you were into diving in Madison in the '60s and '70s, you knew my father. I had a C-card before I had my drivers license. He was into underwater photography too and actually won some awards for it. This August I'm going back to Wisconsin and plan on spending some time sorting through a vast collection of negatives and prints, now lodged in my brothers' basement. I should blog about some scuba stories, because there are so many, and because I'm not getting any younger.


In retrospect, my dad should have left Wisconsin and moved us to Florida or California and pursued his passion. He even wondered that himself. But he didn't. Familial ties kept his autonomy in check.


He kept his job until the late '70s, when printing technology changed and he found himself without a job after a long and protracted strike at Madison Newspapers. His career as a printer came to an end, and he took a custodial job for the local school system.


In 1982, a brain tumor (pituitary adenoma) appeared. Surgery and radiation followed and his cancer went into remission. He lived another 13 years before the cancer came in a particularly wicked and pervasive way. He didn't survive the second onslaught and passed away in 1995 at the age of 62, dying at home.


Not a day passes that I don't think of him and the things he taught and gave me. I dearly loved him and still do. I only wish that he had lived long enough to see his two beautiful grandchildren whom I'm sure he would have adored. They each inherited so many of his traits, each in their own way. In that respect, I feel lucky that his life passed through me, rather than just passing over me, or even ending with me.


It sounds like he loved scuba diving but it sounds like he was the kind of guy who loved his family most of all. I am sure he would be very proud of the man you turned out to be and the Father you have been and will be to your children.

Snaps shots from Father's Day


Reprinted without permission from Ruth Anne Adams blog The Maternal Optimist. But I think she would want to share it with youse guys.


Saturday, July 08, 2006

Gifts of Love
Yesterday was my father's funeral. Today, his body is being buried in the upper peninsula of Michigan in the town of his birth in a plot adjacent to his parents' remains.Yesterday we received many gifts. The service was dignified and lovely. My brother Paul and sister Peggy and Dave and I prepared eulogies for the time after Mass when it is customary to reflect on the life of the deceased.


Paul, a brilliant photographer, shared in words a few snapshots of Dad that were seared into his mind. These images conveyed the fatherly-ness of Dad--from playing catch, to coaching baseball, to helping his adult son finish the last push of college and to avoid the regret of quitting.


My sister, Peggy, who works for the State, but whose passion is the kennel where she raises champion Gordon Setters, told of Dad's love of learning and his avid reading and his stalwart work ethic wherein no labor is beneath you, even the allowance chore she had of picking up dog doo. As a kid, she was embarassed by this being the source of her income. As an adult, she continues this job, times ten. She shared her moments with him near the end and at the end and that Dad had a peaceful death.


Dave was prepared to talk about his instant rapport with Dad, who also served his country as an Infantry Lieutenant. Dave knew that Dad was a patriot and valued honor. They both shared their love of "his baby girl."



The tears, which began flowing at Paul's talk, and continued with Peggy's talk, overcame Dave and he just could not give his talk. He handed it to Mom afterwards so she knew what he was going to say.In our married life, I can count on one hand the times I've seen my husband cry. At those moments, there's something in me that completely shuts off my tear ducts. I don't know why, but it's always been the case. Neither of us puddle up at the same time, although, in fairness, Dave has millions more chances to restrain tears than I do. After that, I delivered my talk:


I want to tell you about my the faith of my father.When he was a little boy, his father died and it was the Depression. He would spend a lot of time with his grandparents in Michigan. His grandmother was an organist for her church. He would tag along with his grandmother on Saturdays when she would rehearse in the empty church.


Dad would lie on his back and look up at the altar. It read "God is Love." He told me he knew it was true.


As a young man,someone told him "You don’t send your children to church. You take them." That made a big impression on him long before he was a husband or father.


When Dad courted Mom, he was not Catholic. When they were married, back in the good old days of Latin Mass, and communion rails, the NON-Catholic groom had to promise to be open to children and to raise them in the faith. That was part of the deal. Not just that he wouldn’t impede their faithful upbringing, but that he would see to it that they were raised in the faith. He gave his word and he fulfilled his word.


I am the youngest of his children. I’m told that Mom would take to Mass those who could behave and Dad would stay behind with those who were too young to sit through Mass. I’m told that as a little girl of about 4, I asked Dad if we could please go to Mass with the others. He did. Every Sunday.


For my whole memory, Dad was always there with us at Mass. Through the years, he participated more and more in the Mass. About the time of my First Communion, I asked him why he didn’t receive Communion. He told me simply, "I’m not Catholic."


As a teen, I was preparing for Confirmation. Like many adolescents who know a whole lot more than their parents, I was uncertain whether I wanted to make the big commitment that Confirmation entailed. I wondered if I could promise to be a Catholic for the rest of my life. He understood my doubt and he was very patient and kind. He made it O.K. to challenge and question my faith, so as to finally embrace my faith. I knew that even if Mom would be upset, he would back me up if I wanted to not be confirmed.


Very few people know that Dad’s morning routine was an early morning exercise, followed by scripture. He read a chapter of the Bible almost every morning. And he read it in 4 different versions in his concordance Bible. He looked at his faith as an intellectual pursuit.I always believed that if I married someone like my dad, I’d be doing good.


I married a non-Catholic and as I really began to embrace my faith as an adult, it began to bother me that my husband wasn’t Catholic. I asked him about it. In a brilliant stroke, he told me that when my dad converted, he would consider it. Let me tell you. I went about my Dad’s conversion with the evangelical zeal of St. Paul. Mom had been praying for Dad for over 40 years. Every little prayer for his conversion was a little piece of kindling on a pile. I pretty much got in Dad’s face and challenged him as to why he was not Catholic. Was it papal infallibility? No. Marian devotion? No. Confession? No. What was it, Dad? Turns out, he had doubt about the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist. That pile of kindling? I threw lighter fluid on it. Father Bill invited Dad to become Catholic and he lit the match.


My birthday is the day before Mom and Dad’s anniversary. Eight years ago, they called to wish me a happy birthday and then he sheepishly told me that the next day, he would be making his First Confession and First Holy Communion in a private Mass...just Dad, Mom and Father Bill. I was overjoyed for him. I demanded "When were you going to tell me this?" He said, "I didn’t want to tell you because I didn’t want you to start bugging David."


Dad’s conversion was completed a couple months later when he was Confirmed. The bishop was making his annual visit and Dad, a white-haired man well in his 60s, was confirmed with all the teenagers. He showed me then that IT IS NEVER TOO LATE.


A brief while later, he had his stroke and that intellectual faith, that newly found faith, that faith that was manifest in the prayers and devotion of his wife changed to a child-like faith overnight. Throughout this last phase of his life, I saw the fulfillment of God’s promises to believers. God is love. God pursues us like a Good Shepherd. He loves us where we are and he takes us as we are. He doesn’t just send us to church. He meets us in church.Dad believed that God is Love. He loved his wife, who prayed for his conversion. I believe Dad’s years as a Catholic onlooker and later as a Catholic in full communion, is a testament to the Sacrament of Marriage. For decades, Marriage was the Sacrament that sustained his faith. In his final days, he was blessed with the Sacraments of Anointing of the Sick and his final morsel of food he ever consumed was the Eucharist. Food for his journey onward to Heaven.


For me, the greatest gift of love was being surrounded by my wonderful family, but especially for the gifts of my friends from ages past, being there. My maid of honor just happened to be in town, up from Florida, with her little girl. My matron of honor adjusted a very busy family schedule and drove several hours from the Twin Cities to be there. My last local non-sibling bridesmaid and her husband [incidentally, my first boyfriend in 6th grade] both took off work and came. All of us shared the afternoon together, poolside at the hotel, while the children swam, making plans and solving all the worlds' problems. Last night, we went to my sister's house and went to the local Lake Days festival and heard a really good band play until midnight. We retired, slept in and prepare to fly home today.


There are three little redheads whom I've missed.

Snap shots from Fathers Day



dbp said...
It pains me to say it, but most of my memories of my dad (going back roughly to when I was 10 or 12),are fairly unpleasant.


It isn't just me either; my siblings and their spouses mostly try and avoid him too. The biggest problem is that my mom is the most pleasant and easy to get along-with person on the planet, but they are kind of a package deal--can't see one without the other.


My wife and I have three daughters and they are the best part of our lives. I try to be reminded that the mere fact of being their father is not enough to keep their affection forever. If I am a big enough jerk for long enough, they will write me off and well they should. This is why I try and be the best father I can for them--it is certainly the most important job I will ever have


Okay, I don't want to end on such a sour note: My dad is no fun to be around, but he was a great dad to brag about when one-upping friends:He was a highly decorated fighter pilot who flew 3 tours in Viet Nam in RF-4C's, drove a racy red Austin Healy and had a rifle-like tennis serve well into his 40's. As a kid, I was very proud to have such a cool dad.

If you want to see a father and husband who loves his family and is a credit to the name of Dad you should check out dbp’s blog.

Just one problem. He let’s those poor kids eat Indian food. For crying out loud get those kids some sausage hero’s and meat ball parm man.

Leave the curry, take the cannoli.

Snap shots from Fathers Day


Darcy said...
My dad?He was a Marine who served in WWII on the U.S.S. Idaho.

Grew up with my mom and dated her for a bit before she married someone else and had 3 kids. Sadly, my mom's first husband died young and guess who was there to step in? :)

My dad didn't mess up his second chance, and they had four more kids to boot!Father to seven children. Great provider, great listener...my favorite fishing partner and my mom's biggest fan.

Miss you, Dad.

You have him with you everyday kid. Especially in how you treat your children.