N.57 My Love For Your Mother, Part II

What began as a friendship was made stronger by a mutual attraction and when we were both seventeen we began what you might call our “official relationship.” The relationship we entered into at this young age shaped the remainder of my life and resulted in yours. However, it was not an easy, uncomplicated path to the marriage. There were missteps along the way. There were disagreements and challenges. We went to different colleges, 150 miles apart, and for many years we went our separate ways. During this time we led our own lives, hardly ever seeing each other, but the bond that had been formed between your mom and I stayed with me always. Even when I refused to acknowledge it, it was there. It had been there since the night I asked your mom to prom. This, I believe, was a moment to make note of.

We were at Jonathan Dickinson State Park just north of Jupiter, Florida. Friends had reserved several campsites and thrown a big party in the woods. I knew your mom would be there with friends and planned to ask her as soon as I saw her, afraid that if I didn’t ask quickly, someone else would beat me to it. I was pacing under the tall pine trees, some distance from everyone else and concealed by the dark. I was nervous, sweaty, and kept rehearsing in my head what I might say. When I saw her friend’s car drive up, I suddenly couldn’t recall a single word of the proposal I was drafting, but I knew I it was now or never. There was more than one guy there that night who liked your mom. I had been strategic, mentioning to a few friends my intentions to ask your mom to prom, a way of staking my claim to her prior to officially asking. Despite this, I was aware there were no guarantees. Just knowing I wanted to take her to prom wasn’t necessarily going to keep some other guy from asking her first. And even if I were the first to ask her, I wasn’t totally confident she’d say “yes.” A couple of her friends had suggested she would, but that didn’t doesn’t necessarily mean it was true.  

As soon as I saw her step from the car, I approached. She was wearing jean shorts, white sneakers and a baggy t-shirt. Nearing her, I hesitated. Not because I was having second thoughts, but because it was then, in that moment of approach, that I realized how much I actually liked her. Standing in the moonlight that night, smiling shyly at me with her fingers stuffed in her pockets, your mother was the most beautiful girl I’d ever seen. Her friends had immediately scattered, leaving us alone. Slapping away mosquitos, we stood at the trunk of her friend’s car, making small talk underneath the stars. Behind us, at the campsite, a bonfire had been lit. Dozens of kids conversed and drank beer from plastic cups, laughing and cursing and egging one another on, but I my sole focus was your mom. At the forefront of my mind was “the ask.” How should I preface it? What’s my lead in?

Your mom seemed a little nervous, too. Even though I can’t remember what we talked about, I remember the awkwardness of it all. The disappearance of her friends. The sweat on my face. The bugs. She must know I am going to ask, I thought. And if she knows, why would she have let me corner her here at her friend’s car unless she was planning to accept? Why would she so patiently endure this senseless conversation if she wasn’t going to say “yes!” Eventually, I ran out of things to say, so during the next uncomfortable pause in the conversation I blurted out something along the lines of, “You wouldn’t want to go to prom with me, would you?” A confusing way to phrase a simple question. It didn’t allow her to give a simple “yes” or “no” answer. But it didn’t fluster her a bit. She replied, very sweetly, “I think that’d be a lot of fun.” Judging by her timidness and smile, I thought she might actually feel the same way about me that I did about her.

I have a friend who was fortunate enough to marry the love of his life. A girl he’d known since he was a teenager. They’ve now been married more than twenty years. Recently, he told me, “There’s nothing I could accomplish that would be more important to me than marrying D__. That’s it. Everything else is secondary.” When your mom agreed to go to the prom, something in me recognized the magnitude of the moment. Turns out the feeling I had that night was on the mark, as that uneasy and clumsy moment came to shape the remainder of my life. Since, there have only been a handful of moments as important — one being your mother’s teary-eyed “yes” when I asked her if should would marry me, and the other being the birth of each of you, our beautiful children.

A few minutes after our date was set, your mom climbed back into the car and left with her friends. I later learned that a girlfriend of hers had been in the trunk, hiding from a boy that was going to ask her to prom. Apparently, she had interest in someone else and did not want to have to hurt this boy’s feelings by turning him down, so she hid and had her friends tell the boy she wasn’t allowed to come to the party. Your mom’s friend had heard our entire conversation. As your mom tells it, driving away from the campsite she could hear her friend yelling from inside the trunk, “Woo-who! __ and __ are going to the prom!”

N.56 My Love For Your Mother, Part I

Meeting your mother for the first time is the most important event in my life, and sadly, I don’t clearly recall how it happened. We were 14-years old, freshmen in high school. We didn’t have a class together, but we would have passed each other in the halls each day and at some point we must have been introduced. I’d give anything to go back and experience it all again — the first time I saw your mom, the first time we spoke. Just to imagine it is a thrill. What I do remember that first year of high school is thinking that she was beautiful. Her voice, with that slight, unidentifiable accent, and her lively and pleasing laugh made her even more so. A friend of mine on the football team made the case one day at practice that your mom had the best legs in our class. He was right.

The more I got to know your mom, the more I liked her. She was sweet, well-liked, an honor student, and she didn’t ever curse, which was a rarity among our high school classmates. In retrospect, it was only that I happened to be blindly infatuated with someone else that I didn’t ask her out sooner. The other part to this was that I didn’t think I was good enough for her.

At that age, I was immature, acting out, in a near constant state of rebellion. What I was rebelling against, I don’t know. Rules? A perceived lack of freedom? My right as a know-nothing teenager to live exactly how I saw fit? Whatever it was, were it not for your mom, it’s possible that I would have never pulled myself together. Your mother was instrumental in reshaping my priorities, and in doing so, literally turned my life around. The lesson I take away from that experience and wish to pass on to you now is just how important it is to surround yourself with people that have good values. Kids who are non-judgmental, kind, and positive. Kids who have a solid work ethic and stay out of trouble. The type of people who brighten your day and inspire you to be the best version of yourself. For me, more than anyone else I met in high school, that person was your mom.

N.55 On Living with Humility

In addition to gratitude, the practice that offers the best chance of relief from our frustrations and anxieties is humility. The complete relinquishing of our ego. That is to say, living as if the ego does not exist. With practice, a person can achieve a humbleness that eases the strain of life by elevating our acceptance of what is to a level of sacredness.

Of course, humility goes hand in hand with gratitude. And it has to begin, I believe, the moment one wakes up each morning. At our first recognition of consciousness. Perhaps with the repeating of an oath. A dedication. A prayer. An accounting of one’s good fortunes, beginning with breath, shelter, the accessibility of food and water. Can we see, stand from our bed, walk? Yes, these things are a miracle. Who is around us? These lives, too, are miracles.

To be successful, or at least to improve our overall well-being, this practice must continue throughout the day, every day, until it becomes instinct. We must acknowledge that the minutes which make up each day are not our own. The minutes are simply time, a measurement, universal and shared. Or maybe not even time at all. This moment before us, it’s simply what is. What we have accomplished or need to accomplish is of no bearing on the true desire and purpose of our soul, which is to be humble, and to love.

I’m not sure we need concern ourselves with anything more. 

N.54 On Living with Gratitude

On the first page of his book, The World As I See It, Albert Einstein wrote that one hundred times a day he “gave gratitude for all, living and dead, whose labors had contributed in some way to his inner and outer life.” I think what he was saying was that it is important to recognize and appreciate everyone who has impacted our lives in some way, from the most significant contribution right down to the smallest. From those strangers who smile at us on the street to those who established and help maintain a society of relative stability and comfort, in which we currently exist. I can’t think of many ideas I like more than that of showing the exuberant level of daily gratitude Einstein suggests. Trace any number of things we should be grateful for back far enough and we will likely find that we owe thanks to nearly all of humanity. This is a life changing practice, that if adopted widely enough, could also change the world.

N.53 A Few of Your Father’s Favorite Sayings

Lest you one day forget, as I am certain to, I want to record a few of my favorite fatherly sayings:

“Change your attitude to one of gratitude.”

“There are two ways to handle a situation: The calm way, and the wrong way.”

“The first and last thing you should do each day is to give thanks.”

Today, these comments are typically regarded with an eye roll. Likely because I don’t always model the advice myself. That said, I do repeat them frequently, and what I’ve found is that the more often I do, the more often I succeed in practicing what I preach.

N.52 On Thoreau

Henry David Thoreau wrote, “Our life is frittered away by detail…simplify, simplify.” He also wrote, “For my greatest skill has been to want but little.” And, “In wilderness is the salvation of the world.” And, “Must the citizen ever for a moment, or in the least degree, resign his conscience to the legislator? Why has every man a conscience then? I think that we should be men first, and subjects afterward. It is not desirable to cultivate a respect for the law, so much as for the right. The only obligation which I have a right to assume is to do at any time what I think right.”

This is why we we walked Walden Pond. This is why we visited his grave.

Read and reread Thoreau. 

N.51 My Daily Failures

I recently dawned on me that you see me fail far more than you see me succeed.

How am I to feel about this?

Everyday there are lapses. Everyday I am tired. Everyday I am frustrated. There inevitably comes a time each day when I act in a way I tell myself I shouldn’t. Or say something I know I should not say. I go to bed at night and instead of being proud of all the things I did decently or even well, all the times I remained calm, all the obligations and responsibilities I addressed, I am regretful of the lapses in judgement, however minor.

I should amend my opening statement. It may not be that you see me fail more than you see me succeed. It is that the failures, however, that remain in our minds. Goodness is expected, often taken for granted. The hundred small things we do each day out of love for you are easy to overlook. But when I raise my volume in frustration instead of remaining calm, or voice disappointment instead of encouragement, we remember.

A father can strive for perfection, but no matter how hard we try, it can never be attained. As is the case with so many things we do in life, it is the striving to do it better, I believe, that makes the difference.

N.50 An Approach To Life, In Summary

Devote energy to yourself and those you love. Only speak nicely of others, and if you can’t, keep quiet. Avoid reality television shows that showcase the worst of human nature. Do the same on social media. Allocate more time to learning about people who are doing or have done something good for the world. Avoid superficialities in thought and action. Remain aware of your true needs. This is more likely to lead to contentment. Be charitable. Go on walks in nature. Most problems can be sorted out on a walk. Routinely break the cycle of chaos, of multitasking, of sensory overload and fragmentation by allocating time each week to simply be still. Sit on a rock, or in the sand, or at the base of a tree, and allow your mind to rest. Reconnect with the energy of the universe. Make yourself a recipient of nature’s boundless endowment.

N.49 More Thoughts On Love

In life, avoid the trivial and the superficial. Anchor your life to the things that are good and timeless. Kindness and compassion for others, for instance. Showing love to your friends and family in your regular interactions. Showing love to strangers by way of simple acts. Make these things the foundation of who you are. Love, I believe, is the answer to most of our troubles. Notice that when actual, true love radiates from your heart, all feels right in the world. 

N.48 On Finding Peace Amidst the Madness

Today I endured a rant from a person of a certain political viewpoint. It was a rant I could not respond to, not because there was no response to the absurd untruths that were uttered, but because I have learned that debating this particular person only results in a having to endure a lengthier, more aggressive and increasingly absurd tirade. How people can believe the lies they hear without seeking verification, which would easily expose these points as untrue, is astounding. As the rant continued, I slowly made my way, step by step, toward the door. I left in a sweat and drove home wrecked with anxiety over the extreme division in our country.

At home, I felt my heartbeat was irregular and checked my blood pressure. It was 152/92. Never in my life have I had high blood pressure. A doctor visit would be in order, if we were not already overwhelmed with bills. 

As I write, I am listening to an Icelandic opera. Klang Der Offenbarung Des Göttlichen – Teil I & II, by Kjartan Sveinsson. Gorgeous music. This is my therapy, helping to abate the unease I feel rehashing my feelings. At this time in my life, developing a consistent routine of exercise, meditation and relaxation seem critical to longevity. Church, too. Let us always keep the faith.