logo-image

Happy Father’s Day, Dad

Shackelford Funeral Directors • June 14, 2017

Sunday morning ministers across the nation will mount their pulpits to address the fathers in attendance.  They will encourage them to assume or continue to fill their leadership roles in the family.  They will remind them that they are the heads of their respective households, the spiritual guardians and the providers of all necessities—and that they best see to it they fill these God-given roles.

Have you noticed the difference between that message and the one that’s spread on Mother’s Day?  Where mothers are applauded for what they do, fathers are often lamented for what they don’t.  Although that message probably does apply to a select few, most of us are blessed with dads who get it and are doing the best they can to meet all the parental requirements—and usually  managing to do it in their own unique way.  So, in recognition of the upcoming recognition, I’d like to ask for your momentary indulgence.  If I may, I’d like to introduce you to my dad—a man everyone knew as the quintessential undertaker but also a man who often took that “unique” thing to a whole new level (including, but certainly not limited to, making the office secretary promise she’d tell us we had to play Sinatra’s version of “My Way” at his funeral).  And someone I miss more and more every day.

To the best of my recollection, Dad had three hobbies:  working, flying, and price shopping for gas.  That last one did, on occasion, result in us being stranded since a few pennies could be saved if we just made it to fill-in-the-blank station.  One such time was on a country road in the middle of nowhere coming back from the committal service of my aunt’s father.  The needle had dropped far below E but he drove right passed the only station between us and town because he’d seen a lower price somewhere else. If not for the kindness of a nearby farmer, we’d probably still be sitting on the side of the road.

His love of flying was a practice not necessarily confined to airplanes.  Once he took his 1983 Datsun (1983 because any car worth having had to be at least 10 years old and have 100,000 miles on it) to the mechanic, complaining of a weird noise coming from the engine, a noise the mechanic never heard . . . until he let Dad drive.  He came back assuring the others at the shop that my dad was right.  You started hearing it up around 80.

I’m sure there were many times he cried in his life, but I only saw three—four if you count when he took us to see “Blazing Saddles” (after which he immediately apologized for having done so . . . with tears of laughter still streaming down his cheeks).  The first was over a cat we owned that managed to dart in front of the wrong car after church one morning.  We lived right across the street from a rather large congregation and the person probably never even knew they hit her.  One of the members offered to provide a name but Dad didn’t want to know.  He was afraid it would change how he felt about someone who was probably a friend and that friendship was more important than the knowledge.  The second time was at the death of a child—a child he didn’t know who died of sepsis.  He stood at her casket as he waited for her parents to arrive, touching up the make-up that covered the evidence of her illness and wiping away his tears with the ever present handkerchief that resided in his back pocket.  The third was at the death of his brother.

My father could converse with anyone about anything and for years I thought it was because he knew something about everything, but I finally figured out that wasn’t the case at all.  He just knew how to listen.  As a matter of fact, he spent an enormous amount of time doing just that—unless you disagreed with him on some point he deemed to be extremely important.  Then he would debate you into submission.  His ability to listen and his qualities as a professional and a person were attributes recognized by his peers—recognition that placed him in several positions of leadership on the state, national, and international level.  Not bad, my mother used to say, for someone from a small town in West Tennessee who stood in the corner at social gatherings with his arms folded behind his back.

Everyone’s well-being came before his own.  He was always last in line at church fellowship meals and the first one to grab a wet cloth and start wiping down the tables when everyone finished eating because, above all, he was a servant.  My father, like bazillions of other fathers in this world, was perfectly imperfect.  And despite all his eccentricities and imperfections, he loved us and sacrificed for us and was by far the greatest man I have ever known—and I’d bet every penny I have that almost any other child I asked would say the exact same thing about their dad.

So this Sunday, if you attend church and the minister starts discussing fatherly responsibilities and how every dad should strive diligently to fulfill them (implying that perhaps they are not already engaged in that practice), think of your own and know that, in spite of all their imperfections, they love or loved you unconditionally.  If you are blessed enough to still have them with you, realize it will not always be that way and honor them for the sacrifices they quietly and willingly make.  And if you no longer have your father physically in your life, be grateful he was yours for a while, and know that you are who you are in large part because of him.

 

By Lisa Thomas February 20, 2025
Although every arrangement conference is different, any that involve planning some type of service share a few things in common, such as deciding who will speak, and when and where the service will be held. And at some point in all this planning, the funeral director will ask “Have you thought about music?”
By Lisa Thomas February 13, 2025
It was the spring of 1991 when I was first required to walk through the doors of Henderson Office Supply on Main Street in Henderson, Tennessee. The business was owned by the Casey family—the same Casey family who owned Casey Funeral Home—the same Casey family from whom we had just purchased both.
By Lisa Thomas February 6, 2025
It was December 14, 1799, and George Washington, first president of the United States, lay on his deathbed, the result of male obstinance, a sudden change in the weather, a desire to be prompt which led to dinner in soggy clothes, and medical practices of the day that were useless in the face of whatever illness was attacking his body. Actually, just useless in general.
By Lisa Thomas January 30, 2025
Pia Farrenkopf was a loner, a smart, driven woman of German descent who would be gone for weeks at a time, if not for work, then for the sheer pleasure of exploring the world. Her family grew to expect unanswered phone calls and random postcards from faraway places.
By Lisa Thomas January 23, 2025
Whenever a death occurs there’s always a cleaning out that follows. It may be a house or apartment, a hospital or nursing home room—maybe even just a closet and a drawer—but somewhere the items that represent that person’s life are tucked safely away, waiting for the day when they will pass to the next generation . . . or Goodwill, whichever is deemed appropriate.
By Lisa Thomas January 15, 2025
I find myself sitting in Panera, eating an Apple Chicken Salad and reading “The 7 ½ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle”, a Christmas present from my daughter and her family. Only this Panera is located in Vanderbilt Medical Center. Soon I will return to the darkness of Room 7 in the ICU and wait.
By Lisa Thomas January 9, 2025
We were just wrapping up a celebratory family meal (please don’t ask which one; I haven’t the foggiest notion, given the time of year and the prevalence of celebratory meals), when my 15-year-old grandson Wilson stretched his lanky frame in the manner that indicates a satisfaction with the food and a fullness from overindulging, and asked “Mona, (that’s what all the grandchildren call me . . . because my first name is Lisa . . . so, Mona Lisa . . .) “when do I get a copy of the Thomas Cookbook?”
By Lisa Thomas December 27, 2024
As I sit writing this, it is Christmas night—that time when the world grows still and quiet as the celebrations of the day fade into memories.
By Lisa Thomas December 18, 2024
‘Tis the season to be jolly . . . unless it isn’t. Unless it isn’t because Grief has recently come to call and seems quite content to stay, at least for the foreseeable future.
By Lisa Thomas December 12, 2024
I made a pretty big mistake this year. Actually, truth be known, I made a lot of mistakes this year. But this particular one was a doozie.
More Posts
Share by: