An Ode to my Father; Neighbourhood of B
As a teenager and an adult, one hears
many complaints about one's parents, and most of what I tended to
hear were complaints about fathers, to wit:
– Father does not allow x because of
unjust reason y.
– Father is all up in one's business.
– Father is never around because he
is always at work.
– Father is in fact a fascist.
– Father is in fact Satan.
While I recognise that my dad and I had
an extremely difficult period while I was between the ages of
seventeen and approximately twenty-one, my only complaint about him
was his slight double standard regarding housekeeping and his
tendency to want me to work on vehicles with him when it was -5
degrees outside.* Indeed, at my most unreasonable of ages, I did not
feel as though my dad was too close, too far away, a fascist, or
Satan.
I did harbour an, as it turns out,
unfounded fear that the second he found out that I am a giant homo
that he would hate me forever. Given his rather conservative
tendencies, I do not think that fear was unreasonable; however, in
retrospect, it really ought have occurred to me that my daddy would
never disown me, ever. EVER. In fact, when my first girlfriend broke
up with me in a most ignominious fashion, he apparently desperately
wanted to give her a good dropkick. Across the street.
We have a bit of a family joke that Mom
and Daddy have been married for thirty some-odd years and lived
together for approximately twenty of them because when we lived in
Corpus, Exxon saw fit to send Dad out of town to Houston all of the
time, and once they transferred him to Houston, they sent him to
Corpus all the time.
Apparently, this makes sense to someone
in management.
At any rate, the point is that even
though Daddy was out of town
a good period of the time when I was very small, he was hardly an
absentee father. I am not one of those kids who does not have early
memories of their father. I have many, ranging from Mom and Daddy
making an orrery
out of their fists to show me how eclipses work (followed by Dad
picking up Mom in his arms and spinning round for a bit), or Dad and
I biking to the HEB with me in the baby seat on the back of his bike,
to him reading me my bedtime stories, carrying me to bed after
M*A*S*H was over, and teaching me the states on this large vinyl map.
Daddy also played his guitar almost every night. When I started
teaching myself to play the guitar, it took me about ten seconds to
pick up the bass line of I Walk the Line
because he played it so often.
And
walk the line he surely did, and continues to this day.
My
friends who tease me about my 'chivalry' have my father to
blame/thank, because he never met a door he did not hold. He treats
my mother like Queen Elizabeth herself. He also insisted that I be
able to take care of myself (this was a joint effort on the part of
both of my parents). Things I
have repaired, built, or remodelled as a joint effort with my father
include, but are not limited to, the following:
– Our
fireplace, hearth, and chimney.
– No
fewer than five vehicles, not including my Mustang.
– The
cable routing to our living room.
– The
kitchen.
– Drywall.
– The
front door.
– The
garage door opener.
That
is just off the top of my head.
Back to my childhood, something which
haunts me to this day is my reaction to a present he brought me once.
When I was really little, one of the things we always watched was
Nashville Now, of which I
have no other memory than a character called Shotgun Red. I loved
Shotgun Red. He was awesome. So, at some point when I was incredibly
wee, Daddy thought it would be nice to get me a Shotgun Red doll, and
he brought it home for me.
That doll, for reasons I still do not understand, scared the everloving shit out of me. And by scared, I mean scares. I feel horrible. Daddy was trying so hard to be nice and get me a present. And that Shotgun Red doll lives in the top of his closet to this day, and when I go into my parents' bedroom at home, I carefully avoid looking in the direction of his closet when the door is open lest I catch sight of that Shotgun Red doll.
That doll, for reasons I still do not understand, scared the everloving shit out of me. And by scared, I mean scares. I feel horrible. Daddy was trying so hard to be nice and get me a present. And that Shotgun Red doll lives in the top of his closet to this day, and when I go into my parents' bedroom at home, I carefully avoid looking in the direction of his closet when the door is open lest I catch sight of that Shotgun Red doll.
I feel
horrible. Right now. I am the worst daughter ever, in this moment.
Jesus. Let us speak of something else.
Oh, I
know. Let us talk about my underlying fear that EVERY SINGLE CALL
from my mother is going to be telling me that something horrible has
happened and the pipeline Daddy is working on exploded spectacularly.
I used to tell myself that these fears are fully unfounded, and it
sort of worked until a prominent member of our church died in the
most recent Texas City disaster.
It
never is, though, and Dad is the biggest safety fascist in the
universe (so, okay, yes. My dad is a fascist. About safety. Woe) and
does not put up with bullshit which might endanger people on his job
site, so that makes me feel better. It probably makes Mom feel
better, too.
I
could go on probably for days about the ways in which my dad has
shaped my life. Softball and baseball are down to him. My congenital
aversion to weird noises in cars is obviously down to him as is my
strong aversion to structures which are not square.
Most
importantly, my daddy has never, ever, said an unkind word to me
regarding my intellect or ability to do something. His opinion has
always been that practice makes perfect, and that if I work hard
enough I can make it happen. Furthermore, my super conservative,
probably totally voted for Mittens father walked me down the aisle at
my wedding.
And
that, honestly, is probably the most concise summary. My father
walked me down the aisle at my wedding. Our friendship has improved
drastically as I have gotten
older, and I am incredibly grateful for that. I am most grateful,
however, that he has always, always loved me, my mom, and my sister
for as long as he has known any of us. Apparently, that is hard to
come by.
___________
*I feel like discomfort was some sort
of prerequisite. Trivia: my dad is actually Ron Swanson's cousin.
Labels: annoying car noises, baseball, dropkicks, fascism, home repair, homotasticness, Johnny Cash, literacy, orreries, posts in which I cried during composition, Ron Swanson, Shotgun Red, torque