Happy Birthday, Dad! ❤

Ho, Ho, Ho…and a heads-up!

You may have read this post from a year ago…thinking about my beloved papa as his birthday rolled around. Today marks what would’ve been his 88th birthday and I’ll be celebrating him all day – in ways large and small – not least of which as I remember the gifts he gave me and the gratitude I feel for being “Sonny’s daughter”. 

I couldn’t help myself…I needed to share it again today because of Wynne’s beautiful Podcasts Take Two post – sharing some of our favorite conversations, podcast-style over the past year. One that still pulls at my heartstrings is the chat Wynne and I had about love letters…long distance letters…to the fathers we’ve lost. Listen to one or all the episodes if you have the time. Gems…every one.

Merry Everything…with love!


(Originally posted on 12/21/22)

If he’d lived, my dad would’ve celebrated his 87th birthday this week.  He’s been gone for 25 years and I realized this morning I’ve lived more than 1/3 of my life without him and yet he’s never far from my head, heart, and thoughts.  Recalling his characteristic good humor in the face of life’s high hurdles gives me courage when I need it, patience when I’m running on empty.

A few months ago, I wrote about how deeply I benefitted from his pointed guidance in my growing up years, particularly when I was under stress.  Take a peek…it’s sweet and will help you understand why I feel so very blessed to share DNA with him…my all-time favorite human. 

This year as his birthday rolls around, I’m musing once again about the gifts that keep on giving – loving life lessons from my papa.  It’s a short list of four things and in celebration of him, I think they’re worth sharing:

  1. Laugh at Yourself First, Agnes Gooch:  I was a quirky, awkward, and uncoordinated kid.  I liked books more than people and left to my own devices, I’d hide in the metaphorical (okay, sometimes literal) shrubs, just to be a voyeur.  I didn’t understand it for years, but whenever Dad saw me hesitate and hide, he’d call me his favorite “Agnes Gooch” and cajole me out of my funk.  Mom enjoyed shaming me for mistakes, for being overly introspective.  Dad?  He’d turn on the charm to yank me forward, remind me I was worthy.  “When in doubt” he’d say, “Laugh off what bothers you…and move on, Agnes Gooch.”  I was too little to understand Agnes was an actual character.  The first time I saw the Rosalind Russell version of “Auntie Mame” I understood dad’s wisdom…really understood it…for the first time.  Agnes Gooch?  Yes, often, that was me!
  2. Service First:  Dad was famous for telling me to ‘be the helper’. He had a keen awareness of the importance of kindness, and I think that trait amplified with my disabled sister Lisa’s arrival and mom’s mental health issues.  He often looked at me as the capable one in the bunch, his compadre in the face of loony business. I realize now it was part of our bonding, daddy-daughter glue. I knew the look – he didn’t need to speak – my cue to step in, step up – either with mom and Lisa or with strangers in need.  Because of his routine of buying an extra sandwich to share with homeless folks, I do the same thing today when I’m out and about and I see people in need.  It feels natural but it’s because of him.
  3. Love the Ones Who Are Different:  Dad looked out for the underdogs and his best friend in high school was a dear man, named “Slats”.  I never knew his given name, but it didn’t matter. “Slats” was a term of affection, a nickname dad gave him because Slats was long and lean…he could disappear, Dad said, if he turned sideways.  Which explained why Dad was forever feeding his buddy…Slats with the high metabolism, the original ‘bottomless pit’. Over the years, I learned why he and my father referred to each other as ‘brothers’.  Slats was abandoned as a kid because of his birth defect.  His left arm didn’t develop in utero and throughout his childhood and adolescence, he wore a sling to disguise the deformity.  Dad knew Slats was a terrific baseball player – despite his disability.  He saw it when they played catch…as if his right arm made up for what his left lacked.  Slats said dad was the one who encouraged him to play and ‘screw the looky-loos’ by ditching the sling…to be himself.  He was the best (only?) one-armed pitcher their high school ever saw.  Years later, dad helped Slats navigate bigotry with employment prejudice…just as any big brother should.
  4. Two Strikes – Not Three:  Dad was a ‘trust your gut’ kind of guy. If he liked you, he liked you.  If he didn’t, he might pause to see if you were worthy…withholding judgment…but unlike his beloved baseball where you get three strikes before you’re ‘out’?  No, no. Two strikes only in his book – that’s all you get.  Off the field, out of his life, no looking back.  I realize now he did that to protect himself.  As I grew older, I understood who the people were who hurt him, alienated him.  Always the ones who are closest – they can strike where it hurts the most and you never see it coming.  Despite how loving and caring he was, he taught me you can be both – kind to others AND to yourself.  You shouldn’t choose one over the other.

Four things…gifts that resonate over the years. Thank you so much for reading. I’m sending hugs and smiles to you…from me and my papa.

Vicki 🥰



46 responses to “Happy Birthday, Dad! ❤”

  1. “Despite how loving and caring he was, he taught me you can be both – kind to others AND to yourself.”

    Victoria, such a beautiful post worth sharing and resharing again and again as you recall your father’s timeless love and wisdom.
    Thank you❤️❤️❤️

    Liked by 1 person

    1. You are so kind, Deborah! Thank you for all of that. Appreciate you for reading…I was just about to read your post from yesterday! Fun serendipity! 🥰

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I love that. It’s fun too that the wonderful quote I chose (from the many) to share from your father was the very thing I was writing about this morning! I love the synchronicity that naturally flows This space of writers and reminds me how connected we all are even when we don’t always realize it. ❤️

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Amen to that! We don’t get to understand the how or the why, but it sure does feel fab when we find ourselves connecting with writer friends on similar topics. So good. Thankful that we connected here! 🥰🥰🥰

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  2. Your dad sounds like a prince. Royko used to write about “Slats Grobnik,” a real or imagined buddy. One of the best qualities anyone can have is to be companionable. You dad was that and more. But mostly I am glad you came out of the bushes, Vicki!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I do believe you and my papa would’ve enjoyed each other…so many stories to swap. And I’d say those “companionable” qualities you sensed in him are traits you possess as well. Thanks so much, dear Dr. Stein. 🥰

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Very sweet. Thank you, Vicki!

        Liked by 1 person

  3. Aww, a beautiful tribute Vicki, just as special the second time around. I especially love the guidance to love the ones who are different, which really is closely related to service first. Love both of them.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you Brian! Love that observation! 🥰

      Liked by 1 person

  4. No matter how long they’re physically gone, they never leave you. ❤️

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Truer words were never spoken, dear Jane. Right-o! xo! 🥰

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Sonny is beaming – I’m sure of it. He’s hanging with my dad and they’ve gotten every bit of the love we intended for them. Loved that you shared these four great gifts from you dad again!! ❤ ❤ ❤

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Wowza…what a fun image. Our two papas having a grand old time…no doubt swapping stories about their daughters…I mean we weren’t always perfect, were we?? 🤣😘🤣

      Liked by 2 people

      1. I’m laughing!! Exactly!! ❤ ❤ ❤

        Liked by 1 person

  6. A lovely, warm post. These are great lessons to carry around as ways to be and as reminders of your dad. Thanks for posting them to share with us readers 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. What a wonderful, generous comment, Dave! Thank you so much. 🥰

      Liked by 1 person

  7. What a beautiful post to remember your father on his birthday. Thank you for sharing this and hugs 💕

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank YOU for reading and for your kindness! 🥰

      Liked by 1 person

  8. Many thanks for the hugs and smiles from you and your papa, Victoria 😊
    Celebrating him through laughter, love and acceptance of those who are different, care of those less fortunate, and kindness to others as well as to self. Life is never the same again after the loss of a parent is it? To be able to celebrate him in such ways must help to bridge the gap of loss. ❤️

    Merry Xmas 🌲 🤶 🎅

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    1. You are a delight, Margaret. Thank you for all of your thoughtfulness. You are quite right…life is never the same. All the more reason to remember them well. Much love and Merry Christmas to you!
      🥰🎄🥰

      Liked by 1 person

  9. Merry Everything, and Happy Birthday, Sonny!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. You’re the best, David! Thank you! 🎄🥰🎄

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I dunno about all that, but no, really… thank you!

        Liked by 1 person

  10. I think as each year passes I think more of my Dad than the year before, and I’m sure he’s “upstairs” fully enjoying that fact. A beautiful post, Vicki.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. How wonderful that is…the deepening appreciation over time. I feel the same, Bruce. And gosh yes…our fathers must love the fact that we remember them well. Yes, yes! Thank you so much. 🥰

      Liked by 1 person

  11. It’s always good to remember the ones we loved so dearly, as long as we don’t linger to long in the past.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Beautiful wisdom, Bridget. Thank you! ❤️

      Like

  12. Happy birthday to your dad! This four things you learned from him are valuable. I will have to try the two strikes approach – such healthy boundary setting!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you, Ab! I love that the boundaries aspect stood out to you. All the best! 🥰

      Liked by 1 person

  13. I love hearing these snippets about your dad. His friendship with Slats,….and wow, you lost him early…you’ve probably mentioned this before, if you don’t mind me asking, how did he die so young? Love too that you have that same impulse to buy the extra sandwich for the needy yourself. Like they say, most of what we as parents want to pass on, is more caught than taught. Beautiful tribute to your dad!DM

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Morning, Doug! I love that his friendship with Slats stood out to you. And your phrase — “more caught than taught”?!? Wowza! I’ve never heard that before — it’s perfect. Especially for my baseball loving Dad who was always pitching and catching, LOL!
      Dad had a massive heart attack when he was 61. Shocking – still. Young, indeed.
      Happy Holidays to you, my Iowa friend. I’m waving at ya — due east in Illinois. 🥰❄️🥰

      Liked by 1 person

  14. Happy Heavenly Birthday!
    Such a lovely tribute. I wish I had known him.
    And this is a reminder to all… to be kind and to be a helper.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Good morning, dear one! Given our shared Ohio roots, ya never know, maybe we’ve all crossed paths before! Thank you, Nancy, for reading and for your wonderful comment.
      Dad had an interior designer’s heart and he would’ve loved your beautiful home and hearth photos. Lake pics, too! Xo…Merry Christmas! 🥰🎄🥰

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Awe… kindred spirits! 🎄✨🎄

        Liked by 1 person

  15. What a beautiful tribute to a wise and loving man. 🥰

    Liked by 1 person

  16. I am so glad you are celebrating your hero and father’s birthday and that “he’s never far from my head, heart, and thoughts.”!!!!!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Oh! You are so right, Mary! Hero AND papa. Xo! 🥰🎄🥰

      Liked by 1 person

  17. I like this “two strikes” idea. I’ve often said we should not give people the benefit of the doubt. Typically, folks show you who they are from the beginning.

    Like

    1. I love your point of view! I think so, too — we just need to be savvy enough to see who they are when they show us, right? xo! 🥰

      Liked by 1 person

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