-
Website
http://discoveringdad.blogspot.com -
Original page
http://discoveringdad.blogspot.com/2008/06/celebrate-dads-fathers-day-contest.html -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
tmanettas
7 comments · 1 points
-
LoriB
4 comments · 1 points
-
Rudy Amid
5 comments · 1 points
-
windycindy
5 comments · 1 points
-
simplyChuck
34 comments · 1 points
-
-
Popular Threads
here's my Fathers' Day Post: http://coffeejitters.blogspot.com/2008/06/5-thi...
and I subscribed too.
Happy Fathers Day
The one important thing I've learned from my father is that you never stop learning how to be a dad.
I subscribed via my Yahoo reader and to your newsletter. Growing up, my dad worked three jobs at a time to take care of his family. He taught me the value of work and making your own way as much as possible. Please enter me in your wonderful contest. I appreciate it!~ Cindi
My Dad is hard-working, earnest, conscientious guy with an incredibly rock-solid work ethic who raised, along with my Mom, three quirky daughters. These days, I am a cynical, free-wheeling Mom of two boys, but I still remember when I was a little girl, waiting up until late at night for Daddy to come home. My Dad worked the 3-11 pm shift, and I would hear Mom pattering around the house in her slippers, waiting for him, way past my bedtime. It was only after I heard him come in every evening and lock the door firmly behind him that I sleep, because only then did I truly felt safe in my little-girls' bedroom with the white and yellow flowered curtains. To this day, I go around checking the locks in my home at night. And I never seem to get to sleep until past that eleven o'clock mark.
But the biggest lesson my Dad ever taught me was cooperation. "One hand washes another," he used to say, and that's true. The best relationships and partnerships I have today come from that central idea, that people help each other, and that each one of us has a responsibility to give back.
Except Dads don't really expect anything back. I watched my Dad take care of his own parents until they passed away a few years ago. I remember him doing many things above and beyond the call of duty for us kids, like making a late 'Taco Bell run' on a Friday night while we all watched TV together after his work week was done and I know he would rather have just stayed put at home. The ice-cream man never went by our house without us kids running outside holding up a dollar from Dad. There's no doubt he and Mom sacrificed a lot in their lives so that my sisters and I could go to college--we grew up in Florida, and I know Mom and Dad didn't have air conditioning in their home until I was a teen. And Mom never had a dishwasher, and Dad put off buying big-ticket items for a long time. My parents never even moved into a new house until after I, their youngest daughter, was married and had a home of her own.
So I guess it's only fitting that I spend at least a little time today letting my Dad know that I do remember those things he's done for us girls, and that I hope I am doing half the job raising my own kids as he and Mom did raising theirs.
Thanks, Dad. And Happy Father's Day!
~Viv
http://coolmomsrule.blogspot.com
My dad has always told me that to be a Dad, I need to be able to roll with the punches and be prepared for the unexpected.
Even at 3 am with a screaming kid I would not trade it for anything.