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| That's Kevin, top left. What a cutie. |
Today is my father's birthday.
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| The mater and paterfamilias, on the occasion of their wedding |
I don't think I was ever what you'd call a daddy's girl. I wasn't really a mama's girl, either, if you ask me. My Facebook relationship status with both of my parents is probably best summed up with "it's complicated" but I'm not sure that's a bad thing. I'm not sure there's anything more mixed up and turned around than the love between a parent and their kid. I love them both. I am exceedingly fond of both of them. I am lucky in all these things.
This marks the 69th year my father has circled the sun.
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| Los Angeles, 1982. My big head is hiding my sister Megan, hanging out in utero. |
During the 38 years my orbit has been intertwined with his we've had lots of adventures together. Our memories are not of father/daughter dances, at least not the foofy kind that involve sparkly dresses and corsages. Our father/daughter dances were self-choreographed numbers to Paul Simon's "You Can Call Me Al," cardancing to Phil Collins' "Take Me Home."
Motorcycle rides across Wisconsin and three am viewings of Halley's Comet, winter camping at Devil's Lake and pitching a tent at Road America. Dirt track racing in Sun Prairie. On family trips he drove and I navigated from the passenger seat.
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| My dad's so cool he got Tina Turner on vinyl as a birthday present. |
When I got interested in mythology in second grade, he gave me Edith Hamilton and Homer. He was maybe a little optimistic about my attention span. When MC Hammer came to Marcus Ampitheatre he chaperoned, and bought us Hammertime shirts.
I love to write because I learned it from him. Politics and dry humor, a sharp tongue and a compulsive desire to correct mispronunciation, nature or nurture they're all his fault.
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| Kevin and Aidan, best friends forever. |
Almost four decades worth of inside jokes and bickering over grammar and political rants, good memories and things that ache. A lot of Guinness.
Almost four decades and I feel like I've only scratched the surface of what makes the man tick. Inasmuch as we can never really know anyone, even the ones we are closest to, maybe it makes sense that our parents are a mystery.
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| These guys, though. |
It was my dad who introduced me to Norman Maclean, who wrote in A River Runs Through It, "We can love completely what we cannot completely understand."
I guess that's what keeps things interesting, yeah?
Happy Birthday, Dad.















