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Connie Schultz
22 May 2013
She Thanked God, and the Debate Rages On

It was a flash of joy against a relentless backdrop of despair. So, of course, the video of Barbara Garcia's … Read More.

15 May 2013
Already, Some Whistle-blowers Have Lost Their Nerve

Two weeks after the press partied hearty with President Barack Obama at the White House Correspondents' … Read More.

8 May 2013
Cleveland Ordeal Dredges Up Trauma for Others, Too

To listen to Connie Schultz talk about this column and the surrounding issues, click here. As I write this, … Read More.

We Did What We Could

Comment

In December 2001, my father sent his first-ever Christmas card to me.

He even signed it, "Love, Dad." Unprecedented. Throw some tinsel on my head and watch me sparkle like a snow globe; that's how happy I was.

Dad came from the "show, don't tell" school of parenting. He supported his family and shoveled the snow from the walkway before any of us were out of bed. His love was to be understood.

His postscript on that 2001 card made clear that despite the arrival of his one-time-only Christmas greeting, nothing had changed.

"I got a card from the wife of a man I used to work with," he wrote. "She was at the church when you spoke, and she said you were the best they ever had. Don't get the big head."

What he didn't mention was that he had attended my speech, too, delivered in the church of my childhood. He also skipped the part about how he had grinned through the whole darn thing.

Each December, I pull out Dad's Christmas card and prop it up on my desk. He's been gone for six years now, and the sight of his cramped handwriting makes him feel a little less far away. His admonishment about this head of mine is a reminder that in his own way, he loved me very much.

I spent way too much energy wishing my father would just come out and say it. Well into my version of adulthood, I'd end every phone call with, "I love you, Dad." His response: "Yep." Sometimes he'd mix it up by saying, "OK."

Click.

Once in a while, I'd push back. "A-a-a-a-nd you love me, too?" His response every time: "Well, if you already know it, there's no need for me to say it."

Click.

When he finally wrote "Love, Dad" on that card, there was no victory. It was his second Christmas without my mother, and his heart was broken.

How I longed for the days when Mom was still around and Dad's "yep" was code for what he meant to say. Some things we learn too late.

This has been a long year for many Americans. Even if our own lives bobbed along without incident, it was hard to ignore the suffering of those around us. We did what we could. We attended funerals and hospital rooms, wrote checks and volunteered, worried ourselves sick and bowed our heads in prayer. Some of us smiled for no reason, and strangers felt a little less alone.

This Christmas season, the tragedy in Newtown, Conn., altered the holiday for all but the most hardhearted among us. One minute we were shopping for stocking stuffers; the next minute we were trying to remember to breathe. Twenty young children and six adults who risked their lives to save them were dead. What? What? It was that horrible, that unbelievable. We never will be the same.

And yet, Christmas came.

Now the new year barrels toward us, a force of promise and uncertainty. May we welcome it with gratitude that we are here to greet it.

As I write this, snow is threatening to bury our house here in Ohio. My youngest daughter and her boyfriend spent the morning on cellphones, trying to reschedule canceled flights home. Halfheartedly, I try to hide my joy.

They are in a hurry, but I'm old enough to be on the other side of that impatience. All of our family was happy and healthy this Christmas. I know that kind of luck runs out.

I also know that my daughter's heavy sighs mean only that she is young, with plans that did not include two more nights with her mother. I will not misread her signals, nor will I complain. Her love is understood.

For that, we can thank her grandfather for a lesson once learned too late.

Connie Schultz is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and an essayist for Parade magazine. She is the author of two books, including "...and His Lovely Wife," which chronicled the successful race of her husband, Sherrod Brown, for the U.S. Senate. To find out more about Connie Schultz (con.schultz@yahoo.com) and read her past columns, please visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2012 CREATORS.COM



Comments

8 Comments | Post Comment
Of all the wonderful articles you've written and I've read, I believe this is the most compelling. It's a glorious thing when we reach a point in our lives that we 'get' our parents - whether still with us or not. My mom died many, many years ago when I was in my 20's and I still bring out the cards she wrote to me with similar sentiments as the one your father sent. I didn't fully appreciate them when I got them, age and time has shown me the deep, deep love my mom had for me....Yep. Thanks Connie - I hope you and yours are snuggled up together this snowy day.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Terri Perozzi
Wed Dec 26, 2012 1:36 PM
Well said for so many of us. As mom to five age ranging 5-14 I have tears running down my face still as I try to write this. I have said over and over I love you's only to realize the youngest and the oldest return them, the middle three are stuck in the zone of discomfort. I cherish each day and feel guilt for having what so many others have lost. I have mortified all my kids with my version of tips for surviving a crazed gunman, putting it in the words of my father when I bought my first motorcycle always be looking for a place to go, keep your head and don't freeze. So as they are out playing in the snow at almost dark and have left with safety tips for looking for the snow plows, I to feel blessed that we seem to have it very good this Christmas, but hoping for a better year to come.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Melissa Tonkinson
Wed Dec 26, 2012 2:09 PM
As the old wall hanging in my Grandmother's kitchen said, "We grow too fast old and too late smart."

Thanks for a good column as always and best for the remainder of the holidays to you, Sherrod, and Franklin.

Pat Patterson
Comment: #3
Posted by: Pat Patterson
Wed Dec 26, 2012 3:31 PM
Thank you, Connie. I am back in Ohio briefly to spend this holiday with much loved family I see far too seldom. I will remember to tell them each how much they are loved. I very much want them to always know that!
Comment: #4
Posted by: Betty Olson
Wed Dec 26, 2012 4:44 PM
My mother died in March of 2011...I always got a "funny" Christmas card from my parents when she was alive. This year I got a very serious one from my father thanking my husband & I for our support and love over the year. And he signed it "Love You...Dad". My father rarely spoke those words over my lifetime...I always knew he felt that way but to finally see it and hear it when he called today to say how special Christmas was for him this year. Children grow & learn to appreciate. My Dad sees that & now as my sons go into their early 20's, I do to. We live, we learn & we grow. Tragedies will continue...and hopefully my sons will respond with love & understanding because that is what my parents always did and what they taught them to do. Happy 2013 everyone....may we count our blessings & help anyone in need!
Comment: #5
Posted by: Rio
Thu Dec 27, 2012 5:29 PM
Okay, you made me cry. Sob, actually. We come from very similar backgrounds, and eras, and families. And parents. This is my favorite of all you've done. Merry Christmas, happy New Year, you're wonderful. <3
Comment: #6
Posted by: Gale Cady Williams
Sat Dec 29, 2012 7:03 AM
Okay, you made me cry. Sob, actually. We come from very similar backgrounds, and eras, and families. And parents. This is my favorite of all you've done. Merry Christmas, happy New Year, you're wonderful. <3
Comment: #7
Posted by: Gale Cady Williams
Sat Dec 29, 2012 7:04 AM
Thanks for another heartwarming piece, Connie. My own father died six years ago, and he, too, was of the 'show don't tell' generation. He, too, opened up quite a bit after mom died and left him bereft after 37 years. As a writer myself it's what I always heard, to show don't tell, so I suppose it's good advice, however difficult to take. Those men were tough on the outside, soft as furry pets inside, though we never (or rarely) saw that side of them. It was wonderful spending dad's last few months with him, seeing that side of him emerge and seeing him revel in it. My dad died a happy man after a fulfilling, productive life. I'm guessing your dad did too.
Happy New Year to you and Sherrod and your families.
Comment: #8
Posted by: Byron Edgington
Sat Jan 5, 2013 12:15 PM
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