Sunday Snippet: The Father’s Day 2025 Edition
For many years, Father’s day was an…uncomfortable holiday for me. My dad left our family when I was 6 years old, and was never really in my childhood, except for the occasional times when we went to where he worked to pick up the few dollars he was willing to give us. He rarely paid support, and my mom worked her tail off going to school full time to get her nursing degree in addition to being a cashier at a grocery store to keep food on the table. I honestly don’t know how she did it. The woman didn’t sleep for over two years. Mother’s Day was huge for us, but Father’s Day, well, not so much.
Don’t start crying for me. I had no lack of father figures in my life. My grandfather was a rock after my dad disappeared—he was always there lending a hand, bringing us groceries, picking up the slack Dad left behind. Mom kept us in church, and the men there showed me how real fathers behaved. Loving, gentle men who tousled my hair and gave me a hug, who came to our house to fix broken pipes or repair appliances or who pressed a few dollars in my mother’s hand outside the church when they knew the budget wasn’t going to stretch far enough. One man in particular was Don Mitchell—a kind fellow who had a delightful sense of humor, was a gifted photographer, and worked hard to take care of his family.
I remember when I was about 11 years old, the Girl Scouts had a Father-Daughter Sweetheart dance (yes, I was a Girl Scout for a very brief time, until I realized it meant I had to go out in the woods and deal with spiders and snakes and other icky stuff). I wanted to go so badly, but I knew asking my own father was a pointless exercise and my grandfather, as dear as he was, wasn’t interested in dancing with a little girl. Mom suggested I ask Don, so I screwed up my courage and invited him. He agreed and I got to wear a new dress and nylon stockings for the very first time. Don brought me a little corsage and we went to the dance, which was held in the junior high school gym. I remember every moment of the evening—I had a dad, just like all the other girls and he danced with me in that hot sweaty gym. He treated me with such loving kindness that I felt like a cherished child instead of an abandoned one.
Don became the benchmark for good fathering to me—and although I met Husband early in my life, I knew immediately that he would be a wonderful father to the children I hoped to have. We only got one, but Husband is a remarkable dad. He fell in love with Son the moment he saw him and the love affair continues to this day. When they are together, the connection between them shines. I have so many fun and terrific stories about Son growing up and I share them here all the time, but for this Father’s Day, here’s one of my favorite Husband/Son moments:
Son was around 5 or 6 years old, and he followed Husband around like a puppy, wanting to do Daddy stuff with him. Husband obliged, always ready to use any moment as a teaching/bonding time. (Son does the very same thing with Grandboy!) One Saturday, he was changing the oil on the car and the two of them were in the garage. I heard them talking with Husband patiently explaining the process to the kid and answering his endless questions. They had the radio turned on to the local NPR station (Husband is a huge fan of NPR and classical music and opera). It happened that the station was playing a performance of Mozart’s Don Giovanni. When I peeked out into the garage, there they were—two pairs of legs sticking out from under the car—Husband’s adult jeans-clad ones next to Son’s little skinny, knobby-kneed ones. They were both lying on their backs, changing the oil and singing with the baritone at the top of their lungs, “Ah Patron, Ah, Patron…” I’d have killed for a video camera. It was one of the most touching moments in the raising of Son.
I admit it, I’m a sucker for a great dad—I love men who are in love with their kids. When I see I father touch his child fondly or pick them up to give them a hug or kneel beside them to offer soothing words, I melt. So watching Son with Grandboy has been absolute heaven because he’s so in love with Grandboy. When he held that baby in his arms 13 years ago, the look in his eyes is the exact same look his own father had the first time he saw Son—unadulterated awe and a love so pure, it glows. I see that look on his face when he looks at 13-year-old Grandboy and repeated on Husband’s face when he looks at 45-year-old Son. Great dads! What joy!
Happy Father’s Day to all those great dads out there!
Gratitude for This Week: So grateful for Husband and Son and what fabulous dads they are; grateful to see all the folks who came out for the NoKings protests–we will prevail; thankful that Falling for the Doctor popped back up onto the Amazon Top 100 Bestsellers–it’s been there pretty steadily for three solid weeks! Wow! Grateful for Robert Reich, who teaches me and gives me hope with his Substack posts and podcast! Happy we got the cottage cleaned!
Stay well, speak out, make your voice heard, always choose kindness, and most of all, mes amis, stay grateful!
4 Comments
Kadee McDonald
Lovely post, Nan. Father’s Day is hard for me, too. I had my dad until my late 30’s, but he was sometimes AWOL, so to speak, and he cared little about what was important to me. I mean, he walked me down the aisle, and all that, but our relationship was often superficial. I don’t think he even knew that I was in the Top 10 of my high school class or was graduated from college cum laude, thank you very much. Like you, my mom is the one who kept us steady…rent paid, meals on time, clean clothes, etc. It wasn’t a terrible ‘growing up,’ but not an ideal one, either. I’m so glad you’ve had your hubby and son to see what good dads do for their young ones. 🙂
Latesha B.
What wonderful memories you have. I hope the men in your life had a wonderful Father’s Day.
Roseann McGrath Brooks
What a wonderful man Don was, as well as your grandfather and the other “church men.” And I’m so glad Husband and Son are such great fathers. I am lucky to have had a terrific father as a model (still terrific at age 90!) and now an amazing Hubby-as-Father. I hope men (and women, for that matter) realize how important it is to be a role model to children, both ours and others’.
Kathleen Bylsma
Such wonderful reflections on fatherhood and I, too, wish you had a video of Husband and Son chnging the oil while singing “Oh Patron”