{"id":10195,"date":"2013-07-19T18:47:36","date_gmt":"2013-07-19T22:47:36","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.irawagler.com\/?p=10195"},"modified":"2016-10-22T19:13:39","modified_gmt":"2016-10-22T23:13:39","slug":"the-lion-in-winter","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.irawagler.com\/?p=10195","title":{"rendered":"The Lion in Winter&#8230;"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a href='http:\/\/www.irawagler.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2007\/06\/photo-2-small.JPG' title='photo-2-small.JPG'><img src='http:\/\/www.irawagler.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2007\/06\/photo-2-small.thumbnail.JPG' alt='photo-2-small.JPG' \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Suddenly, at the green heart of June, I heard my father\u2019s<br \/>\nvoice again&#8230;For a moment he seemed to live again in his<br \/>\nfull prime\u2026And for a moment we believed that all would be<br \/>\nfor us as it had been, that he could never grow old and die\u2026<\/p>\n<p>&#8212;Thomas Wolfe<br \/>\n_______________<\/p>\n<p>I fretted a bit as May passed on and June approached, then came sliding right on in. I had to pick a date, soon, to go up to Aylmer. To see Dad. I had told him, back when he called before I left for Germany. I\u2019d come in June sometime. And he was expecting me. It sure would be nice, I thought, if someone could go with me. I figured Janice would be busy, and I didn\u2019t want to pester her. But I texted her anyway. Can\u2019t hurt to try, I figured. Hey, I\u2019m leaving to see Dad next Friday, the 14th. Any chance you\u2019re in the region somewhere, so I can pick you up? Like we did <a href=\"http:\/\/www.irawagler.com\/?p=6591#\">last summer<\/a>? And she answered what I knew she would. \u201cSorry, they got me in Houston that week. I would if I could. I just can\u2019t.\u201d That\u2019s OK, I said. It\u2019s probably one of those things I need to do alone, anyway, I thought. It was what it was. I\u2019d go alone. <\/p>\n<p>The next Thursday after work I stopped at Enterprise in New Holland, to pick up my rental car. Something like a Ford Fusion, I\u2019d told the guy earlier over the phone. But I asked when I got there, like I always do. Any Chargers on the lot? \u201cSorry, not this time,\u201d the nice young man told me. \u201cI got a new Fusion, though, just brought it over from the dealer\u2019s lot. Brand new. You\u2019re the first driver to take it.\u201d Wow, I thought. If I can\u2019t have a Charger, that\u2019s gotta be second best. A brand new car. He went out and brought it up, a sleek silver bullet. \u201cIt\u2019s got three miles on it,\u201d he said, handing me the keys. It took me a few minutes to figure out all the glitzy controls. It\u2019s like driving a rocket ship in there, new cars like that. I drove it home, and packed my bags that evening. Ready to leave the next morning for the long slog up north over the border. <\/p>\n<p>And it is a long old slog, especially if you\u2019re alone. The next morning by seven, I was on the road. Heading west and north, up Rt. 11 and Rt. 15. The interstate, then, to Buffalo. There, the border. It lurked in the back of my mind, how long it had taken Janice and me to cross last summer. We had putzed along in clogged lanes for over an hour. The Fusion glided along. Decent car, except for its low headroom. I had to set the seat all the way to the floor to keep my head from brushing the ceiling. But I adapted, and it drove real nice. <\/p>\n<p>And once again, in upstate New York, my GPS insisted on dragging me off the interstate onto two-lane back roads. I\u2019d meant to look at a real Atlas, before I left. To see the layout of the interstate, to see if I couldn\u2019t just stay on it. But I forgot. The GPS led off. I\u2019d better follow those roads. All the way over almost to Buffalo, the back roads led me. I had the time, I thought. This is back country, small towns you\u2019ll never see from the interstate. I stopped for fuel and a greasy slice of pizza at some little hick town place. All the pumps had crude paper signs taped to them. You couldn\u2019t pay with a credit card. You could pump gas, but you had to prepay inside. Amazingly enough, it looked to be a hopping little place. <\/p>\n<p>Less than an hour later, I was looping through Buffalo, toward the Peace Bridge. Different place, from where Janice and I had crossed last summer. And it was a breeze, right through. A two-car wait. I\u2019ll take that any time. I crossed into Canada and headed out to connect with Highway 3 into Aylmer. It was a beautiful sunny day. A few clouds shifted about above. I felt good, but a little strange. I was on a new road, here. <\/p>\n<p>It sure would be nice to have Janice along, I thought. But I don\u2019t. And I just sat back and cruised along and thought of things, back through so many years. How I had so desperately longed to reach my father\u2019s heart after I left the Amish. How I had tried, again and again and again, stories that were never written and never told. How we simply could not communicate, not outside the boundaries of his world. And it\u2019s probably not that he didn\u2019t want to, at least I can think that, from where I am today. He just didn\u2019t know how. And neither did I. <\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s a universally powerful thing, one of the most powerful of things, the yearning of a child for his father\u2019s blessing and acceptance. The heart can be rejected and crushed and rejected and crushed, over and over, year after year. Until that yearning just sinks down, somewhere deep down inside, and you think it went away. And you give up. But the seed of that yearning never dies. Not in the heart. It never dies. <\/p>\n<p>And it was all so real to me in those moments as the miles flowed along, the memories of all those hurts, of all the frustrations and bitterness and rage. How it was for all those long years. And how, at this late date, something had changed. And why. My father is old now, there is no other word for it. And he has been tired for a long time, really, when you look back and remember. Sure, he held onto the fire of who he was for as long as he could grasp it. But then it just came seeping in with age, a certain mellowness. That\u2019s what age does, when you think about it. It grinds things down. All the way down to where I was going to see Dad because he wanted me to come. There was a wall there, once, a wall of solid rock he could never reach through. Now he wants me to come, he wants all of us to come. Now he wants to see his children, all of them, even the ones who left the Amish. Now. And you think back to all those years and wonder what it would have been like, had it always been this way. The thing is, though, it couldn\u2019t have always been this way. <\/p>\n<p>Because it wasn\u2019t. Because it all happened as it did. The wall was what it was. There are a lot of old wounds buried in the rubble of that wall.  And not just mine. They are the wounds of all his children. But that wall couldn\u2019t have come down any other way, I don\u2019t think. That\u2019s the only way to look at it. It couldn\u2019t have, because it didn\u2019t. <\/p>\n<p>And it&#8217;s not that I was all that tense or pensive, getting close. I really wasn\u2019t. But it was different, this time. I could feel it, a new road rising. And the ghosts hovered, in my head. Memories of what was versus a little glimpse of what might have been. I was eager and excited to see my father, and just talk to him. About a lot of things. About Germany. And Switzerland. And about something I never thought I would. My book. <\/p>\n<p>Because he had read it. He didn\u2019t, for a long time. Refused to, for a year and a half. But late last year, he got a notion to. Well, he got a notion that was fed to him by poisonous whispers in his ear. He\u2019d always bragged about my writing. \u201cIra will not write bad things about me.\u201d And the poisonous voices whispered. <em>Ira did write bad things about you. Blamed everyone but himself for his problems. He really blames you. He was very disrespectful<\/em>. And those vicious little whispers stirred in my father\u2019s brain and worked his blood into a rage. He locked in. He wanted to read the book, he declared. Now. They tried to deflect him. My sister Rosemary, to her huge credit, refused to give him a copy. \u201cNot in this state of mind,\u201d she told him. \u201cNot until you calm down.\u201d Which, by some miracle, he eventually did. Calmed way down. Then, when she saw that he was ready, she gave him my book. And my father sat down to read what I had written from my heart.<\/p>\n<p>And it moved me deeply, what they told me happened next. It was the dead of winter, January, when he read it. Bitter cold and snow. He was pretty much housebound. The winter just went on and on, the cold seeped in and dulled everything it touched. And there he was, in his little house, reading. His reaction after finishing the book? They told me. There wasn\u2019t a whole lot of reaction. Just silence, and quiet sadness.  <\/p>\n<p>Somehow that hit me hard, and I felt sad with him. Seeing it, feeling it from his perspective. His son had told the whole world some pretty heavy stuff. About a lot of things. I don\u2019t know how you\u2019d deal with that, being confronted with that, from where he was. After all he\u2019d seen and done. After who he had been, after all he had written. And now, when he\u2019s gray and bent and old, now comes this. I just don\u2019t know how that would have been. But I knew he was sad. And that moved me. I felt his sadness with him. <\/p>\n<p>The Fusion sliced along Highway 3, a nice two-lane road running over the rich black flat lands of southern Ontario. Through little towns and villages. I pushed along, pulling out and around lumbering tractor-trailers that clogged the road now and then. The afternoon slipped by as I drove and drove. And shortly after four, I pulled into Aylmer. It was just impossibly small, from the great metropolis I\u2019d remembered as a child. A bare little town, with a little row of shops huddled forlornly around a stop light at a crossroad. I crossed through the light and headed on out west toward St. Thomas.  <\/p>\n<p>St. Thomas is a bigger place than Aylmer. I remember the name from my childhood, but I don\u2019t remember the town. Because it was out there, just a bit outside the edges of my world. And I was going there now to find a motel room. I\u2019d looked it up on the web, and knew there was a good selection. And sure enough, right there on the east side of town as I approached, right there was a brand new Comfort Inn. I\u2019ve seen some trashy Comfort Inns. This wasn\u2019t one. I pulled in and chatted with the clerk, a nice lady. I\u2019m here from PA, to see family, I told her. Turned out she was the auctioneer Les Shackleton\u2019s niece. Les Shackleton, the guy who had sold our stuff at the farm sale in 1976, when we moved to Bloomfield. I remember Les, I told the clerk. How is he? \u201cHe\u2019s doing pretty good, just getting up there in age,\u201d she said. And I booked a room for two nights. It was late afternoon, past five. I carried in my bag, and settled in a bit, then headed out to my sister Rosemary\u2019s farm to hang out for the evening. <\/p>\n<p>I headed back east to Aylmer, then out through the main road through the community. It\u2019s barely recognizable, from the place I knew as a child all those years ago. Way more built up, with a lot more Amish homes scattered along the way. No one knew me, or knew I was there. I passed through the heart of the settlement, then left on the road to my sister Rosemary\u2019s home farm. They\u2019d be looking for me. I pulled in and walked into her home. She smiled and welcomed me. \u201cI\u2019m so glad you came,\u201d she said. Yeah, me too. And we just sat there and caught up. I hadn\u2019t seen her since last August, when we went up to see Mom. \u201cJoe will be home soon,\u201d she said. \u201cJust stay here for supper, then you can go over to see Dad for the evening.\u201d So that\u2019s what I did. Mom was not feeling well, Rosemary told me. She had a fever now, for the second day. The nurse was stopping by that evening, to check it out. Soon Joe arrived home from Tillsonburg, where he had been peddling strawberries door to door. Some things never change. I used to do that as a child. And we sat down at their little table to eat. A simple meal. Soup and homemade sausage. Homemade stuffed sausage, hickory smoked, just like we used to have way back. Rosemary has kept the tradition, and to me, there is no better sausage anywhere than the stuff I grew up with. <\/p>\n<p>After supper, we walked over to the little house where my parents live. It\u2019s a tiny place, a little shack, really, probably twenty feet wide and maybe thirty feet long. A nice clean little place with a tiny kitchen, a bedroom and a little office in the corner where Dad writes. And he was sitting there, at his typewriter. He heard us walking in and looked up. Hi, Dad, I said. He\u2019s old, but he\u2019s there. You can see his concentration when he listens to you talk. He smiled at me, and we shook hands. \u201cWell, you made it,\u201d he said. His voice cracks, now, when he talks. Yes. And we went through our normal little routine, our normal little dance. \u201cHow was the trip?\u201d he asked. Oh, good, I said. I left PA this morning. It\u2019s a long old drag up here, but I made pretty good time. \u201cWhere are you staying?\u201d I got a motel room in St. Thomas. As we talked, Rosemary slipped into the bedroom where Mom was. I walked in behind her. And there she lay. Curled up. Unaware. \u201cShe has a fever,\u201d Rosemary told me again. And I bent down close to my mother\u2019s wrinkled face. Mom. It\u2019s me. Ira. There was no response, of course. Dad came stumping into the kitchen then, and I sat down with him to visit. And it didn\u2019t take him long to get to it. \u201cHow was your trip to Germany?\u201d he asked. It was great. Absolutely great, I said. And I sat there with him and we talked.<\/p>\n<p>Back home, I had printed out a dozen or so pictures of the trip. In color, at the office. And I went and got them. I showed him, as we just chatted right along. Here I\u2019m talking to a crowd at Leuphana University, I said. He took the picture and looked at it closely. \u201cThat\u2019s quite a crowd,\u201d he said. Around two hundred, I said proudly. \u201cMy, my,\u201d he went on, chuckling. \u201cIt seems like there\u2019s mostly girls in the audience, there. Weren\u2019t the men interested in what you had to say?\u201d I laughed. Yeah, I said. Seems like mostly women show up at my talks. But there are some men in there too, if you look close. And I showed him pictures of Muenster and the cages. Do you remember that story, of the violent Anabaptists? I asked him. He seemed fairly vague about it. Yes, he remembered the name, Muenster. But he never paid it much mind, he said. Those were violent Anabaptists, not the real ones. I didn\u2019t argue, just told him the story of the cages. We moved on through the stack. And I showed him the real treasure from Germany. The pictures of <em>Family Life<\/em> in the little Museum. They were just there, in a glass case, I said. I was completely surprised. He smiled. \u201cDid you tell them?\u201d he asked. \u201cDid you tell them your father started that magazine?\u201d Oh, yes, I did, I said. I waved my arms, like this. Pointed and shouted it, when I saw them. He leaned back in his chair and beamed. <\/p>\n<p>And he asked me. \u201cHow many copies of your book have sold?\u201d Oh, right at 140,000, I said. I wasn\u2019t sure. Last I\u2019d heard from Carol, she\u2019d told me it was in the 130Ks and counting. But that was a while ago. So I figured it was safe to slip it up there to the next level. He grappled a bit with that figure. \u201cHow many?\u201d 140,000, I said again. He seemed impressed. Then five minutes later, he asked again. \u201cHow many copies?\u201d And I told him again. Seemed like he had to hear the number a few times to grasp it. Or to make sure he hadn&#8217;t heard wrong. <\/p>\n<p>And we sat there and talked, the two of us, and it was good. After a bit, the nurse stopped in to see Mom. She disappeared with Rosemary into the bedroom. Ten minutes later, she emerged. \u201cHer vital signs are all strong,\u201d the nurse said. \u201cShe has constipation.\u201d And she and Rosemary talked about what to do about that. The evening was moving right along. It was soon time for me to head to the motel. And I told Dad. I\u2019m here to see you. What do you want to do tomorrow? Do you want to go somewhere, to see someone, to visit? And I could see the wheels turning in his head. He knew I knew that he wouldn\u2019t ride with me in my car. He never has. His calculations led to the only place they could. And he asked, looking at me kind of sideways. \u201cWell, will you drive with me in my buggy?\u201d Sure, I said. If your horse is safe. He laughed. \u201cOh, yes, my horse is an old plug.\u201d All right, I said. That\u2019ll work. Maybe we can go see David Luthy at his historical library. I haven\u2019t been there in a lot of years. Dad agreed. That would be fine. He seemed a little astounded, that I\u2019d ride with him in the buggy. It\u2019s not a big deal, I said. I came to see you, and we\u2019ll go do what you want. I said good night then, and headed back to St. Thomas and my room. <\/p>\n<p>The next morning around nine I headed out to the farm. Stopped in Aylmer at Tim Horton\u2019s and bought coffee to drink and a box of a dozen donuts to take out with me. Tim Horton\u2019s is a Canadian phenomenon. Every little burg has one. And they serve some of the better donuts I\u2019ve ever tasted. Way better than what we have here with Dunkin\u2019 Donuts. And their coffee, too, is just quality. I wish that chain would make it to the US. Anyway, out I drove into the beautiful cloudless day. All day, I\u2019d spend all day out there. Mostly with Dad, but I\u2019d spend some time with Rosemary and her family, too. <\/p>\n<p>I arrived and carried the box of donuts into the house. Rosemary smiled her thanks. Her daughter and my niece, Edna, was flitting about, working this and that. Dad and I are leaving for David Luthys in his buggy, I told her. Can someone get the horse hitched up? We need to leave around ten or a little after. I\u2019ll drive the horse, but I want nothing to do with going to the barn or hitching him up. Edna laughed and disappeared. Ten minutes later, she returned. \u201cThe horse is hitched up and tied up, out by the rail,\u201d she said. \u201cReady for you and Daudy any time.\u201d Thanks, I said. I\u2019ll go over and chat with him now. We\u2019ll leave soon. And I walked over to Dad\u2019s little house. He was in his office. I sat in the chair across from his desk, and we talked. Ready to go soon? I asked. <\/p>\n<p>In the bedroom next door, I heard voices. They were getting Mom up for a few hours. They get her up in her wheelchair, just to change the pressure points on her body. And she sits there and reclines, and mostly sleeps. A few minutes later, they wheeled her out into the kitchen. I heard Rosemary talking to her. \u201cIra is here,\u201d Rosemary said. \u201cHe came to see you and Dad.\u201d And I heard the murmur of her voice, soft but very clear, in the only lucid moment she had while I was there. \u201cYou mean our Ira?\u201d she asked. \u201cYes, our Ira,\u201d Rosemary answered. And I stepped out to greet her. Mom, it\u2019s me. But in that instant, she was gone again. \u201cShe knew there for a second you were here,\u201d Rosemary said. \u201cBut she\u2019s gone again.\u201d Yeah, I know, I answered. I heard her. I\u2019m grateful for that. <\/p>\n<p>The horse is hitched up and ready, I told Dad. We need to leave soon. We have to be back for dinner (noon meal). He was all hyped up and ready. Grabbed his big old black hat and put it on. We walked out to where the horse was tied up. He hobbled slowly, and I walked slowly. We came up to his buggy, specially built for him. It\u2019s in the old classic Aylmer style, with rubber-tired wheels. But they set it down lower, somehow. It sits close to the ground. So it\u2019s easier for him to get on and off. I untied the horse and took the reins. Backed him up a bit, then turned out onto the lane. And out to the road. There I stopped and looked both ways, for traffic. I wasn\u2019t feeling all that safe right that moment, I have to say. Those buggies just aren\u2019t safe on the roads. Nothing was coming, so I pulled on the right rein and clucked. The horse, whose name escapes me, lumbered out and down the road. And we were off. <\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s been a lot of years since I rode with my father in a buggy. Decades, probably. Maybe longer. Somewhere in there, I\u2019m sure I have since I was a child. I just can\u2019t remember when. We didn\u2019t have far to go. A mile, maybe. And we just chatted right along as the buggy quietly rolled along on rubber-tired wheels. \u201cJunior lives here now, with his family,\u201d Dad said as we passed the old Jake Eicher place. \u201cHe had some kind of accident a few years ago, crushed his heel. They have a real nice family.\u201d We passed Pathway Publishers on the left. Then right at the corner, and on past a few more homes, and the old school house where I went for first grade. Well, those grounds. They tore the old schoolhouse down years ago, and built a new one. But the old pump still sits there, right where it was. And the swing set. Still the same one. <\/p>\n<p>Then we arrived at David Luthy\u2019s place. The preeminent Amish historian in the world, David Luthy has assembled the world\u2019s largest collection of old books and other paraphernalia that were Amish family heirlooms. He has written extensively in <em>Family Life<\/em> over the decades. Real research, is what he does. Historical articles, a great many of which detailed and described failed Amish communities through the years. And it was a special thing, to have an inside track to his library. It\u2019s not open to the public. You have to have an appointment, and then maybe not, depending on who you are. That\u2019s how hard it is, to get in there. But I was with Dad. He can get in anytime, almost. And I could get in with him. <\/p>\n<p>David greeted us. He was there in his office, typing away. He\u2019s older now, his long magnificent beard is no longer dark, but gray. His wife Mary rushed out, too, from the house, smiling. She welcomed me. They knew me as a child. And we walked to a back room and sat around a table. For more than an hour, David told me fascinating tale after fascinating tale of his library, and about some of his acquisitions. He unveiled and showed me an exact replica of an original Gutenberg Bible, complete with gold plated pages and illustrations. We examined ancient copies of the <em>Martyr\u2019s Mirro<\/em>r and the <em>Ausbund<\/em>. He talked and talked. Just before noon, Dad and I got up to leave. He stepped into his low-slung buggy. I untied the horse and stepped in, too. Then we were off, back to Rosemary\u2019s house and dinner. <\/p>\n<p>Things were bustling at the farm when we got back. It had been wet for weeks, and Lester, Rosemary\u2019s married son who farms the home place, had hay down in the fields. It had been rained on to where it was pretty much ruined, he told me. But he figured he could bale it and get it out of his field late that afternoon. It was junk, but he had to get it off the field, so the next cutting could grow. I spent a few hours in Rosemary\u2019s home, while Dad returned to his desk and his writing. And they stopped by to see me for a few minutes, a few of my nieces and nephews. Eunice came with a couple of her daughters. Philip and his wife stopped by early that evening. <\/p>\n<p>And then, around five or so, I wandered over to see Dad again. He was sitting at his desk, typing away. They got rid of his old manual model. Probably ran out of parts. It\u2019s an electric typewriter he uses now, adapted to a 12-volt battery. It hardly makes any noise. Sure doesn\u2019t clatter and clack and ding, like the one I remembered him using. He stopped typing and leaned back in his chair. And the two of us just talked. <\/p>\n<p>We chatted for a while about this and that. And I knew he wouldn\u2019t bring it up. So I asked him, right out. What did you think of the book? And he leaned back some more and smiled self-consciously. \u201cWell,\u201d and he sat there a bit. \u201cI guess I\u2019d ask this. What do you think the world thinks about the Amish and about me?\u201d So that was it? That was his sorrow? I chose my words carefully. And I told him. They will think you are a talented and driven man, who got a lot accomplished in your life as an Amish person, I said. And they will know you were flawed.  But we are all flawed. All of us. You are. I am. It doesn\u2019t make any sense, to pretend we\u2019re not. <\/p>\n<p>Maybe he grasped that. Maybe not. I think he did, a little. And then he talked some more. \u201cPeople have told me they were impressed, and I agree,\u201d he said. \u201cYou tried, you really tried to make it work. I\u2019ll give you that. You came back and tried again and again.\u201d That was pretty huge, to hear him say that. To recognize that. But then he balanced it out. \u201cI still think it was a mistake, to hang around that caf\u00e9 so much,\u201d he said. And he talked some more about this scene and that. \u201cYou sure got it right, about your horse,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s exactly as I remember it. I remember how beaten down you were, and how I offered to buy you another horse. But you wouldn\u2019t take it. I never could quite understand why.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>I was depressed, I said. I just needed to get out. I knew I couldn\u2019t make it. That\u2019s why I turned down your offer. He seemed to absorb that. And we talked a bit more. I wanted to mention Nicholas, to get his thoughts on that. I just didn&#8217;t get it done. And then he talked about Sam Johnson. Dad seemed to understand why Sam cut me off. And he approved of it. Sam had to cut me off, because I didn\u2019t stay. OK, I said. Doesn\u2019t make much sense to me, but if that\u2019s how it had to be, then that\u2019s how it had to be. And he talked about Sarah, too, and how I\u2019d wronged her. He looks fondly on her as a daughter he lost. Respects her a lot.  Yes. I said. I did. I did wrong her, very much so. I made that pretty clear, I think. Like I said, we\u2019re all flawed. I certainly am. But I just tried to tell the story. That\u2019s the only way to write a story. Tell it like it was. Be honest about who you were when you tell it. And who you are now. <\/p>\n<p>Rosemary clattered into the kitchen, then, carrying a large tray. Food for our supper. \u201cThey\u2019re out baling hay, so we won\u2019t eat until later,\u201d she told us. \u201cSo I brought your supper. Come to the table and eat.\u201d Dad and I got up and walked to the kitchen. I sat down. He paused where Mom was sitting, a few feet away, napping. He spoke to her, some lighthearted question. \u201cEvery day, I try to say something that makes her smile,\u201d he said. And then he stumped over to the little table and took his seat. This is a remarkable moment, I thought. Not that long ago, he wouldn\u2019t sit with me at any table. He wouldn\u2019t eat with me. Because he was shunning me. I had told him, back then. I\u2019m not excommunicated. The Goshen Amish church where I left was more progressive. And I wasn\u2019t excommunicated. Well, I was, but after I joined the Mennonite Church in Daviess, they lifted it. Made it like it never was. And I told Dad that. But he\u2019d still shun me, he told me, because he felt like that was the right thing to do. And he did. Back then. For a lot of years. <\/p>\n<p>But not now. I uncovered the dishes on the tray. Meat, chips, lettuce, freshly chopped tomatoes, and cheese. And dressing. A taco salad, I said. Dad pulled up his chair then, and we paused and bowed our heads. I wondered if he\u2019d pray aloud. He used to, years back. And sure enough, he spoke it. The meal blessing prayer. In his cracked voice, with that old rhythm he always had. \u201cAlle Augen worten auf Dich, oh Herr, denn Du gibst Ihn Ihre Speise zu Seiner Zeit\u2026\u201d I sat there and drank it in. He finished the prayer, and we took the food on our plates and ate. Just the two of us together, at that little table, in that little room in that little house. <\/p>\n<p>After the meal, I sat with Dad in his office, and we just talked. He\u2019s working on his own memoir, now. Two binders of notes were spread out beside his typewriter. Recently, he sent a few dozen pages of the first draft to all his children. So we could check it out. I liked it, I told him. I learned things I never knew before about you. Keep it up, keep writing. I want to read what you have to say. I liked it a lot. Don\u2019t worry about the moral lessons, though, in your story. Just write it. Trust your readers. And respect them. If there\u2019s lessons to be learned, they\u2019ll pick those up on their own. You don\u2019t need to tell them. He pondered that a bit. I\u2019m not sure he quite grasped what I was trying to say, because he never wrote like that. Just the story. He pretty much always had an explicit lesson poked in there somewhere at the end. Because that\u2019s how he wrote. We sat there, and I looked at him from across the desk as the sun slanted to the west. And I saw the moment, what it held, what it symbolized. I slipped my iPad from my briefcase and quietly snapped a picture. <\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.irawagler.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2007\/03\/Dad-in-office.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/www.irawagler.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2007\/03\/Dad-in-office-150x150.jpg\" alt=\"\" title=\"Dad in office\" width=\"150\" height=\"150\" class=\"alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-10081\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>And later that night, after I returned to my motel room and darkness closed in, I thought about it. The whole day. The time I\u2019d spent with Dad. Especially our meal together at the little table. And hearing him pray that prayer, that was a special thing. It was a gift, all of it, every minute of this day. And at that moment, I saw it in my mind, as clearly as if I were standing back there, what was going on about now in the little house where my parents live.  <\/p>\n<p>Mom was in bed for the night. They\u2019d tucked her in earlier. And Dad, well, Dad was doing what he does almost every evening. Sitting in his office, pounding away at his typewriter. Except these days, he shuts down early. He can\u2019t stay up half the night. Not like he used to. He\u2019s ninety-one years old. And he\u2019s just too tired, he simply doesn\u2019t have it in him anymore. And now, he was getting up to get ready for bed. He carried the lamp into the kitchen and set it on the table. Opened the bedroom door, so Mom could hear. And then he knelt there by a chair. <\/p>\n<p>And in a cracked and faltering voice, still laced with remnants of the comforting rhythmic flow his children have always known and will always remember, he prayed that beautiful old high German evening prayer by heart. Beautiful, is what all those old formal German prayers are. Just breathtakingly beautiful. And he spoke it, the prayer for this evening. Thanking God for His love and the gift of salvation. Thanking God for all His blessings. Asking the Lord to lift His benevolent hand of protection over him and his family, those he loved. All alone now, he prays every morning as the day breaks. And every evening, after the sun has set. <\/p>\n<p>Kneeling there, in the bleakness of his bare surroundings, he prays for all his family. He prays for Mom. For his children and his children\u2019s children. Wherever they may be scattered on the whole earth. And the children still to come, he prays for them, too, the generations beyond. He prays for all of them in the only way he knows how. Just like he always has.  <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Suddenly, at the green heart of June, I heard my father\u2019s voice again&#8230;For a moment he seemed to live again in his full prime\u2026And for a moment we believed that all would be for us as it had been, that he could never grow old and die\u2026 &#8212;Thomas Wolfe _______________ I fretted a bit as [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-10195","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-news"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.irawagler.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/10195","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.irawagler.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.irawagler.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.irawagler.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.irawagler.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=10195"}],"version-history":[{"count":136,"href":"https:\/\/www.irawagler.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/10195\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":14211,"href":"https:\/\/www.irawagler.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/10195\/revisions\/14211"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.irawagler.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=10195"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.irawagler.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=10195"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.irawagler.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=10195"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}