Photo by: Ian Buchanan

Memories of my Father

by Tiaras and Tantrums
Photo by: Ian Buchanan

My father was perhaps the hardest working person I have ever met (besides my twin brothers). Because of his (extreme) work ethic, I rarely saw him as a child. At the dinner table each night where we were not allowed to speak one single word or we were dismissed from the dinner table. On Sunday mornings at church as he would give me and my brothers the evil eye if we moved a muscle.

Each and every Sunday we all(me and my little brothers and father) would load up into the cab of my father’s pickup truck and drive to my grandmother’s house (my father’s mother). Every single Sunday. It was a joy, an absolute treat to go. She lived on this huge farm with geese, pigs, cows, chickens, horses and a huge barn.This barn was a delight to explore for new baby kittens… even though my grandmother drowned each and everyone that we found.

I had a mini-bike and my brothers had three-wheelers and we shared a snowmobile for the winter months. We rode horses, collected eggs, climbed the windmill, we explored the deserted train tracks. And we worked as well. In the garden harvesting every vegetable you could think of. We chopped wood, loaded wood, stacked wood and we swept wood chips. I also helped butcher chickens (my brothers were excused from this disgusting chore). I could chop off a chicken’s head, pluck it clean, cut it up perfectly and feed the feet to the cats… I don’t think I could do it today though.

After play time or work time there was always snack time. My grandmother was very German and one had to rest and eat after playing or working. She had the best little snack time ever; to this day I can taste her perfectly plump blackberries with fresh cream, her delicious cheeses and meats and her water that was pumped from the well.

My father would sit at one end of the table and my grandmother at the other. Each would drink, eat and chat. My brothers and I would devour whatever food was in sight and beg for ice cream.

These are the memories of my father… these are the rare times that I saw him as a child.

My father became ill and was diagnosed with a rare blood disease when I was a 15 and quickly deteriorated. We no longer went to my grandmother’s on Sundays. He no longer went to church with us on Sundays. In fact, he was rarely in any shape to do or see anyone.

My father died two months after I graduated from high school. I had already moved away by that time. I was (and still am) sad that I never got to say goodbye to him. But I do know that he has been watching out for me all these years.

My father was very proud of me for graduating high school. I remember chatting with him once when my boyfriend was over at our house and we were discussing college. He was very sick at by this time. My father told me to leave and never come back and to stay away and do whatever it took to be successful. He told me to travel and suggested that I apply to be an airline attendant (I wish I would have listened to him on this one). This was a rare conversation that my father ever had with me and I will cherish it forever. That is my favorite memory of my father.

I stayed away and I did succeed and I love to travel.

What is your favorite memory of your father?

Sassy Redheaded, Tiara wearing, No Tantrums Allowed, Marshmallow Momma to 3 gorgeous children whom I love to the ends of the earth and more.I am just a woman who is a little bit girlie, a little bit naughty and completely divine. Living the splendid life!

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47 Comments

My Dad died only three weeks after my daughter was born on May 20th 2008 at 10.10am. I live in the US but my family are in the UK and I wasn't able to go home to see him as I couldn't fly. My daughter was three weeks early, and he died around my due date. Thankfully he was able to see her on the webcam before he went into hospital and never came out again. Dad was ill for only five weeks. My sister's baby was born June 10th - he didn't even know it was a beautiful girl...

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My Dad was a very hard working, cripple man. During the great depression, he worked six days a week to take care of our family. There were six of us kids and we had very little of the finer things of life but our mother made our clothes out of whatever was available and we always looked real nice whether we were dressed in bleached out feed sacks or in material bought at McCrory's five and ten cent store...

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Amazing how this article hits home for so many and is so well timed for me. I lost my father when I was 12 years old to a benign but inoperable tumor at the base of his skull at the top of the spine. I loved my father very much and was very much a daddy's girl. My father missed my high school and college graduation, my first car, my wedding, and the birth of my daughter...

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What a wonderful memory! It reminds me of my summers spent with my paternal grandmother on her farm. My dad is my rock, my best friend, my everything. From the time I was born, I've listened to him above everyone else. I wouldn't eat as a newborn for my Mom, so he would come the hospital before work, at lunch and after work to make sure I was fed. He would lay me in his arms & sweet-talk to me as I gobbled down 2 bottles in one sitting...

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Oh Thank you Thank you - everyone for all your wonderful - heartfelt - stories on the memories of your fathers!! I loved reading each and every comment!!!!

Lovely, as always, Teresa!
xoxo
Robin

My dad was my hero. He would've been 77 this past Sunday and died exactly 2 weeks after he turned 66 on January 25th, 1999.
My father was the driving force in my life. He taught me courage, perseverance, strength, tenacity, tenderness and love.
I learned so much from him I could write forever. I was the apple of his eye and he was my everything. I almost didn't survive his death...

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Wow , this is hard . My Dad died when he was 57 (complications of alcoholism) and I was 26. We never really got a chance to sit and chat . He seemed to be a very private person ( with me ). He was always visiting family and friends on his days off.These were rare as he worked 2 jobs all of my young life . Always shopping for a bargain , like a case of sauerkraut juice or 24 bottles of his favorite mouthwash.Helping people from friends and family , to practically strangers with loans , etc ...

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God bless you for sharing!

I lost my own father just a few months ago from unexpected complications that developed after surgery. Childhood memories were not always so great, because he had a problem with alcohol. But the Lord delivered him after I left home. I must say to you, however, my father loved his wife and children so very much. He made sure we never went without food or clothes. After becoming sober, he worried a lot. Therefore we all talked to him nearly daily...

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God bless you for sharing!

I lost my own father just a few months ago from unexpected complications that developed after surgery. Childhood memories were not always so great, because he had a problem with alcohol. But the Lord delivered him after I left home. I must say to you, however, my father loved his wife and children so very much. He made sure we never went without food or clothes. After becoming sober, he worried a lot. Therefore we all talked to him nearly daily...

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I have so many great memories of my father that it is hard to choose one as my favorite. I was the youngest child and only girl. My father used to spend lots of time with me. He would take me to Iowa with him to visit my aunt, uncle, and cousins. Sometimes my grandmother would go along, but on one particular trip she did not. Just me and my father made the trip and along the way we stopped along the Mississippi River...

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Beautiful topic. Fathers make such an impact. I wish they all knew what a difference they make in our lives.
Thankfully, my dad understood this. Before he passed away nearly 2 1/2 years ago (at 69), he was a loving, kind and gentle man who always strove to do what was right by everyone: his wife, his employer, his children, his friends... even strangers. What a wonderful example he's been to me...

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I have a lot of great memories of my dad. My dad was a very hardworking man so that my mom could stay home with me and my sister and two brothers. We always had our meals together at the dinner table. This is where we talked about how our day went; what went on in school, what happened at home and anything else we wanted to talk about...

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I enjoyd reading all of these stories. Thank you for sharing your memories of your father. I, too, have many memories of my father, happy/sad/beautiful and not so beautiful, but I treasure all of those memories in my heart, for he was my dad.

I hope many more stories, maybe of different topics, will be posted in the future. God bless you all.

Unfortunatly my dad died when I was 9, his loss is something I feel every day of my life. I don't remember much. I remember he smelled like the shop that he worked at. He loved the outdoors, he took us snowmobiling a lot in the winter, he loved music. I think im a lot like him even though I don't remember to much, a lot of my memories come from the pictures and home movies we have.My father in law also died when my husband was young so our 3 children have missed out on having a grandfather...

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