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Eulogy to Another Great Dad

boys1979About five years ago, one of the earliest readers of this blog was generous enough to share the life story of his beloved father, who had recently died before his time. I called the post Eulogy to a Great Dad. It was one of my favorite stories, because it was apparent through his son’s words that this man had really devoted his life to being a good father and a good person in general.

Dad stories are also particularly meaningful to me because it’s my own primary mission in life right now. My main motivation for retiring early was a desire to put that role as the top thing in my life. At age 30, I set aside 20 years for this project with a goal of being cool, understanding and infinitely supportive to any kids I might have, with anything else coming a distant second. Now eleven years into that project, it remains the one thing in my current life that I manage to stick to without any compromise, and thus without any regret.

Lots of this was inspired by warm memories from my own upbringing. Our entire family, while not the glamorous and self-actualized group of perfect humans they used to make TV shows about, was still way up there on the happy outcomes scale. My Dad was a big part of that, always thoughtful and non-judgemental, encouraging learning and healthy behavior and frugal living through his presence in the household. Although my parents ended up separating in the early 1990s, they finished most of the hard work of raising us four kids first, and I know how much work that must have been.

The highlights of this father-and-son relationship revolve around music, writing, learning and travel. My Dad had been a musical semi-genius since birth, and as a result our childhood came with free impromptu concerts every day. He was always disappearing to play some badass jazz piano on the glossy black 1974 Yamaha upright, or picking effortlessly on the acoustic guitar, occasionally throwing in formal or silly lyrics with his fine tenor voice. In the 1980s, he let me move the family stereo system permanently into my bedroom to nurture my own budding love of Music All The Time. All four of his kids now place music at the top of their list of favorite things in life.

In 1983 he reached the age of 40, and bought a red and black Kawasaki motorcycle, joking it was a frugal way to address a midlife crisis. I was 9 years old at the time, and that summer we embarked on a long roadtrip down to Kentucky – just the two of us, with just some saddle bags full of clothes and picnic supplies. I still remember every detail of that trip – the thrill of highway travel with the asphalt rushing just below your feet, the novelty of crossing the US border and the stern nature of the officer who questioned us, the steep winding road to the Best Western hotel on a panoramic hilltop, and a week of spelunking and guided tours in the wild underground world of Mammoth Cave National park. Decades later, we would both still cite that Father and Son Adventure of Questionable Safety as one of the highlights of both of our lives.

Eventually all of us kids grew up, and our relationships remained loving and open. We’re oddballs in the sense that we don’t tend to remember each other’s birthdays, or remember to make the right phone calls or send the right greeting cards, but once reunited we resume the deepest and most interesting conversations as if we had never left the room a year earlier.

Starting this blog in 2011 brought an unexpected boost in my friendship with my dad, as he was one of the first subscribers and continued to read every article as they came out. He would often send me his thoughts on posts he enjoyed – searching my email reveals at least 50 such emails, with titles like “Latest MMM” or “Current Column.” He even participated occasionally in the writing, once sharing this post about frugal shaving, and another time interacting playfully in the comments section with my sister as if they were not related. Like me, he connected more deeply with people through writing and his own career was as a writer of advertising, editorials, books, and articles.

I learned a lot from Dad, and he claimed to learn a few things as he watched me grow into adulthood as well. Noticing the heavy emotional burden that negative thoughts would place on my life as early as high school, I deliberately became an optimist instead, reading self-development books and experimentally applying their principles to the world. The stuff actually worked, and he noted the ongoing benefits of what I called Outrageous Optimism, as he watched things happen in my life that he had formerly assumed were not possible. He decided he should work a bit more on optimism as well.

During university, he let me move into the spare bedroom in his apartment which was near the campus, and I enjoyed teaching him weight training and physical fitness while he taught me about stock investing and jazz piano chords. Those two years of being adult roommates were a valuable finish to my time of growing up as his son.

It was a good thing that all these good things happened during our lives together, because in October of 2016, he started having some difficulties with certain words, prompting his caring wife to start keeping track of unusual occurrences in a dated journal. His appetite shrank a little, and he lost a few pounds from his already-slim frame.

One day, in a slow-motion piece of cinematic tragedy, his wedding ring slid off of a narrowing ring finger as he walked through a parking lot, and it turned out to be lost forever, like the growing number of words he could no longer quite bring to mind.

He checked into a hospital, where they scanned his head and found that a dark mass had formed within.

When I went back to Canada to visit him in that hospital, I could hardly believe he was sick. He looked just fine – same alert eyes set in friendly wrinkles, the same compact and upright body, and the same familiar voice. But he was also significantly different – focused oddly on the present and with very little concept of the future.  He was able to understand advanced conversations and free from worry, but with quite a bit of difficulty expressing concepts or figuring out how to find his place in a book.

The problem was a rare but incredibly tough form of brain tumor called Glioblastoma. Affecting people seemingly at random, this type of cancer builds itself into a lump in your head that grows very rapidly, crowding out the blood circulation that allows your normal thought processes to take place. Patients of this form of cancer live only a few months to a couple of years, depending on whether or not you can slow it down with surgery and radiation.

These last few months were tough, as this brilliant, witty man faded quickly to become a confused, sleepy person with limited speech and recognition, who then faded purely to sleep. His last systems finally shut down on the evening of January 13th, thankfully in an extremely peaceful hospice with loved ones nearby.

We’re all sad, of course, but also much more grateful than I would have imagined. Although cut short by a decade or two, our Dad’s life overall was one of a lucky person. Like the first Great Dad at the start of this article, Dad’s four children and the loving wife that survives him have great respect for the way he lived, and his six grandchildren will have only fond memories of a man of readily offered kindness.

For my part, his sudden passing has shaken up my life. Originally shocked and depressed to hear what was happening to him, I eventually passed on to accept reality, and also become much more aware of what mortality really means. I’ve lived a long time already, and it has been quite an experience. But it really could end at any moment, and even if I evade disaster, the odds say I’ve used up a full 50% of my lifespan.

Perhaps even more notably, I’m suddenly on the tipping point between the labels “young guy” and “middle-aged man.” I’ve been a young adult forever, and this is the first time in life I’ve realized that stage can actually end. This means that it would be foolish for me to waste any of it, and I am suddenly much more hesitant to let any days go to waste.

If you found out this evening that you only had one month to live, imagine how deeply you would crave that warm carefree phase of your life that came just before – when the supply of healthy days seemed unlimited and you could do anything. That unlimited supply of life, which you took for granted and wasted on unnecessary arguments and commuting and television, would suddenly seem like the most precious and unattainable luxury in the world.

I realized that for now, I am still in that happy, carefree summer of unlimited life. I still have the luxury that my Dad lost so suddenly, and holy shit do I feel lucky to have it now. So I’m going to get up and enjoy a lot more good times while this sun shines.

Grandpa MM with son baby MMM, circa 1975.

Grandpa MM with son baby MMM, circa 1975.

Afterword:

Beyond the living descendants and many memories in everyone he knew, my Dad left behind plenty of written words and even some music. We found his little digital studio recorder sitting on top of that same black Yamaha piano, which still sits in the house where his wife now lives, newly alone. The memory card contained five beautiful little songs he had been working on recently, and they captured his memory for me above all other mementos.

I can hear his soul perfectly in the timing of every one of these notes, and see his hands, still infinitely nimble after 73 years, hitting the black and white keys as they flew across the piano, powered by a mind that had thought in terms of music since 1943.

I have uploaded a copy here just in case you want to put on some headphones and play it for yourself. These songs didn’t have names, but my sister decided this one can be called “Stars”

 

Rest in peace, Dad – we will all do our best to live on and live well, in your honor.

 

  • Kenji January 18, 2017, 2:06 pm

    Thanks for sharing, MMM. I’ve been reading your blog since just before my now 3 year old son was born. I was raised without a dad, and it’s my 20 year project to be the best dad I can be for my son (and now baby daughter). For what it’s worth, your blog has inspired me to completely change my priorities (and even start my own blog!). Your writing has and will have a significant affect on my 2 kids’ childhood. Your dad would be proud to know that your writing has no doubt enriched countless children’s lives as their parents spend more time with them at home building things, and less time working long hours and sitting in traffic.

  • Sara January 18, 2017, 2:07 pm

    The best article you’ve written, your dad would have had some fun things to say in the comments section about it. The impact we have personally on the people we care about can not be underestimated, whether it is positive or negative. This is such a example of the need to love and help the people we love and the ones we don’t even know whenever we can. Especially but not only our children. The only thing we really have that’s ours in life is our interactions with others. There’s no point in holding back our love affection or caring for others, give it all now while we are able. I envy you your dad but I also know I can be that parent if I choose and give my children the same gift. Thank you for this wonderful post!! And all the work you do on behalf of others. Thank you, for not being silent.

  • Jennifer January 18, 2017, 2:27 pm

    I’m so sorry for your loss. I lost my mother to the same disease a few years back. The hardest part for me was seeing the decline. I felt like I lost the woman who raised me long before her heart stopped beating. I’m glad you have so many good memories with him.

  • Arthur January 18, 2017, 2:28 pm

    That was a heartwrenching, beautiful tribute. All my condoleances to you and your family for the loss of such an amazing man.

    I’m sure he is jamming with the greats in Heaven and watching over you with pride.

  • Hogan Haake January 18, 2017, 2:30 pm

    Thanks for sharing his life and music with us. I put on my headphones and enjoyed his talent!

    Hogan

  • Deb January 18, 2017, 2:33 pm

    Beautifully written, MMM. I am so sorry for your loss.

  • Nick January 18, 2017, 2:34 pm

    May he Rest In Peace man. He did a great job raising you.

  • Valerie January 18, 2017, 2:43 pm

    So sorry for your loss. Losing a parent is never easy, losing them well before their “time” is even harder. So glad you have such wonderful memories to carry you forward.

  • Mark January 18, 2017, 2:44 pm

    Pete, I’m a long time reader, first time poster. So very sorry for your loss. Was moved by your post for many reasons, not least of which is because I also lost my very loving, talented and accomplished dad on December 23rd after a short and shocking bout of pancreatic cancer. I’m about your age and went through the same feeling about the transition from ‘young guy’ to ‘middle aged man’, but as usual I’m inspired by and appreciate your unwavering optimistic outlook on life regardless of the circumstances.

    For all of you lucky ones who have yet to lose a parent, please do yourself (and them) a favor and tell them everything you want to about what a great parent they are NOW. The unexpected does happen sometimes and if it does in your case, I promise that conversation will be a gift (to you and your parents) that will make a very difficult time just a little easier.

  • Julie Sibert January 18, 2017, 2:44 pm

    Thank you for sharing so authentically. There is no greater tribute to someone than to share intimate details about the impact they had on your life. You and your dad were fortunate to have forged such a beautiful relationship. Thanks too for sharing the piano piece — it is beautiful.

  • Andrew Maxwell January 18, 2017, 2:54 pm

    What a lovely post. So sorry to hear about your dad. It sounds like the memories of him will colour your life in the most positive of ways. Stay strong.
    Andy
    Bristol, England.

    • Andrew Maxwell January 18, 2017, 2:55 pm

      PS he really knew how to play them keys!!!

  • T-Bird January 18, 2017, 2:55 pm

    Condolences.
    I lost my dad on July 4, 2016.
    This song summed it up for me https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CWY1vFMdma0

  • Becki January 18, 2017, 2:58 pm

    Sorry to hear the news. Wonderful post. Thanks for sharing.

  • Don't Need Roads January 18, 2017, 3:00 pm

    My condolences and thank you for your writing (now and in the past). Your dad I’m sure would be proud of this latest post.

  • Adam January 18, 2017, 3:00 pm

    I’m so sorry to hear this. Your dad sounds fantastic, it hurts when they leave but if they hadn’t been so special it wouldn’t hurt as much. Thank you for the music.

  • Bret January 18, 2017, 3:06 pm

    The songs “The Living Years” (Mike & the Mechanics), “Cat in the Cradle” (Harry Chapin) and “Leader of the Band” (Dan Fogelberg) all came to mind reading your beautiful tribute to your father. Though you had a much better experience with yours than most of the artists, the sadness of the loss is still the same. So glad he had such a positive impact on you, and that you have much you can treasure from your time together. Not everyone can say that, though many wish they could. May you be comforted during this time of loss.

  • Joshua January 18, 2017, 3:07 pm

    Thanks for sharing Pete! My best to you and your family.

    Man….looks like I’m not getting any work done today, but my little man is gonna get picked up a little early from preschool now. We might need to go do some exploring or hiking or any one of a zillion things that are so much more important than money and this office I’m sitting in.

    It’s unfortunate that I (and I think a lot of us) sometimes get lost in the monotony of the day to day and need a reminder like this to get myself back on the right track. I sometimes wonder if we are better off before we lose someone close or afterwards. I feel like I always had plenty of time until my dad passed away a bit unexpected a few years back. Sure I wish he was here today to meet his grandkids, but I also worry that I might not appreciate my time with them as much if I was not aware of the aspect that we all only have so much time. Our time with each other will always be our most valuable asset. We are all born rich in the best way….it just takes a while to realize it and some never do. I’m so fortunate man. Thanks for the reminder.

  • Alex January 18, 2017, 3:12 pm

    RIP! Prayers for him & family!

  • Corbett January 18, 2017, 3:14 pm

    MMM — your words, that music, simply beautiful – my condolences

  • David M. Golnick January 18, 2017, 3:17 pm

    Condolences MMM… Thank you for sharing your stories about your father, as every person who ever had (has) a close relationship with their father will surely appreciate. I take comfort that the best part about great father’s is great children, as their greatness is passed on… Beautiful song by the way. Perhaps as a dedication to our fathers’ we all do one more extraordinary thing this month?!

  • Gino January 18, 2017, 3:19 pm

    I’m sorry, Pete, for the loss of your dad. What a great song, though. Thanks for sharing it and sharing your memories of your dad.

  • Teri January 18, 2017, 3:21 pm

    I knew something was wrong when we hadn’t heard from you as frequently as before. My heart goes out to you and yours Pete. I lost my Mom in 2011 and still forget that she isn’t on this earth any longer. Sometimes I go to pick up the phone to call her and realize she will not be there to pick up. You never realize how much you learn from a parent until they are gone. She does show her presence though by leaving me pennies. I call them my pennies from heaven. You will see, your dad will never leave you and signs will start to appear. In the meantime, cherish the memories and continue to have new ones with your own son. God bless you all.

  • Mr. RIP January 18, 2017, 3:24 pm

    I’m Sorry for your loss, Pete.
    I’ve read the whole post thinking “no, this is not an eulogy… I mean that kind of eulogy… it is surely not… the tone is so positive…” When you mentioned the brain tumor I had to reread the whole post.
    You’ve been lucky to have had such a great father, I’m virtually toasting with you to Grandpa-MM memory. Beers up.

  • Linda January 18, 2017, 3:31 pm

    Oh gosh, I am so terribly sorry. We never get so old that we don’t still need our parents. If anything, the older we get, the more we need them. The more we wonder if they had the same experiences and feelings that we go through as we raise our kids. Seems like he left behind a beautiful mark upon the earth.

  • Marlena January 18, 2017, 3:31 pm

    What a great story of a great dad. Thanks for sharing.

  • Goodwin B January 18, 2017, 3:35 pm

    Thanks so much for sharing your thoughts with us and helping to remind me how much we still have to be thankful for having known those special people in our lives we call “Dad”, “pop”, “daddy”, and in my case, Bus, who help make us who we are and are still there, in our hearts and our memories , when we need them. Thanks again.

  • Cynthia January 18, 2017, 3:36 pm

    Sending you and your loved ones my sincerest condolences. I listened to your dad’s song, it was beautiful.

  • Corey January 18, 2017, 3:37 pm

    I’m really sorry for your loss. This was a great tribute to your father and inspirational to me as a Dad. Thank you for sharing.

  • Adventures with Poopsie January 18, 2017, 3:41 pm

    I am so sorry to hear of your loss, but so grateful for this story you have shared. It was beautiful and I know I’ll be reflecting on it for days to come.

  • christopherj January 18, 2017, 3:49 pm

    What a loving, living tribute – with Music. I think Dad would be proud. Thank you for sharing with us.

  • bestname January 18, 2017, 3:53 pm

    I’m so sorry for your loss. This is a beautiful tribute to your father. Thank you for sharing his story and his music with us. It sounds like he was an amazing, talented, intelligent, loving person.

  • Kathy January 18, 2017, 3:56 pm

    MMM Warm memories of your dad always.

  • Alicia January 18, 2017, 4:03 pm

    What a beautiful and inspiring tribute, MMM. Thank you for sharing your grief and your story with us all.

  • Madeline January 18, 2017, 4:10 pm

    Great Dad.Great tribute.Great life! Great lessons. So sorry for the loss of your Dad in this lifetime. What a legacy of love and memories and adventure and wisdom he has left you!! Thank you for sharing it with us.

  • Eric Goldman January 18, 2017, 4:13 pm

    Very sorry for your loss, Pete. Beautiful tribute.

  • Steve UK January 18, 2017, 4:15 pm

    So sorry to hear of your loss; such a good tribute to a good man and a good example of a father. Love the music recording!

    “he will turn the hearts of the fathers to their children, and the hearts of the children to their parents” Malachi 4:6 The Bible.

  • Chris January 18, 2017, 4:32 pm

    So sorry to hear another your dad’s passing. I can tell from your passion about great parenting that he had a great impact on you and his spirit is going to carry on in you, your son, and generations to come.

  • David January 18, 2017, 4:34 pm

    You had a great teacher. I can’t help but think about what lovely things your son will say about you. Not to mention all the people whose lives are being impacted because of what you do. Pretty cool. Thank you for passing on what he modeled, teacher. Peace.

  • Julie January 18, 2017, 4:42 pm

    MMM: so sorry to read that your dad died.
    When I approached 35 I realized my days are numbered and I’d better use them well. I’m not quite middle aged but “woman” now seems more appropriate than “girl” for the fave in the mirror. Young lady will do, too.
    Prayers etc for you and your family.
    Thank you for your thoughts on aging in this post, and for sharing about your dad.

  • Dru Pearson January 18, 2017, 4:46 pm

    I’m sorry for your loss. I think your father would have loved this tribute to him. You undoubtedly made him proud.

  • Sarah January 18, 2017, 4:51 pm

    What a wonderful piece of writing in tribute to your dad. I am sorry for your loss. Thanks for sharing this with your readers.

  • Linda January 18, 2017, 4:54 pm

    I am so, so sorry about your Dad. He sounds like a wonderful man–what a lovely tribute you’ve shared. Sending hugs your way.

  • lurker January 18, 2017, 4:56 pm

    sounds like a really cool father to have had…..nice piano player as well.
    thanks for sharing all that.

  • Adam January 18, 2017, 5:02 pm

    Dear MMM,

    I’m very grateful for you and your blog for helping me improve my life and strengthening my positive outlook. Very sorry for your loss.

  • Abdel Jimenez January 18, 2017, 5:06 pm

    MMM you look like your dad. He seems like a very calm and wise man. Depending on your beliefs if everything is composed of energy, then we are energy as well, which includes our soul. Energy is neither created nor destroyed, but only transformed. Therefore our soul should be immortal and we are only changing clothes (our bodies). I could be wrong but I like to think that our soul lives on and we are here for a purpose and once we complete that purpose then we move on. Hope your dad finds peace as well as you and your family. I have heard that meditation helps.

  • Geodude January 18, 2017, 5:08 pm

    Thank you for the honour of sharing this eulogy for your Dad. I am sure he would love this article, a lovely tribute to a life welll lived. Sending healing thoughts to you and your family.

  • Joe (arebelspy) January 18, 2017, 5:09 pm

    What a beautiful tribute. I love how you are carrying on his legacy with your parenting. I can only hope to be as wonderful a dad as you two. Thank you for the inspiration, pain-filled as it may be.

  • Judge January 18, 2017, 5:15 pm

    Pete,

    Long time reader & admirer from up near your old digs in Ontario; first time poster. I lost my Dad in March 2016 after he suffered through three months of a brutal and rare condition that left him a mere shadow of the man he was. I feel your pain & loss my friend.

    Your Dad sounds like he was a truly exceptional human being. Deepest sympathies to you and your family.

  • Katrina January 18, 2017, 5:21 pm

    I’m so sorry for your loss. How wonderful to have had friendship with him in your adult years. Wishing you all the best as you move through this next chapter. Take gentle care of yourself.

  • Lavagirl January 18, 2017, 5:26 pm

    I’m very sorry for your loss. Sounds like he was a really cool guy.

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