Friday, August 2, 2013

eulogy



I attended a funeral recently for your aunt’s husband. His name was Dan and he lived quite a full life. He had been a star high school quarterback, polo champion, expert horse judge, and seems to have single handedly made soccer in Arizona into a well-run, organized, and properly officiated sport. In addition he found success in his main career as a stockbroker. 

                I was not aware of all of these accomplishments, but his son who gave the eulogy made sure to highlight them all. It was a fine life, a fine eulogy; however, it left me wanting more. I had no insight into how this son knew his father, what he had learned or how one life had shaped the other. I doubt anyone can attend a funeral without dwelling, even if just for a moment, on their own mortality.

                So of course I began to wonder what you would say, what your brother to be would say, what mom would remember of me. Hopefully there is plenty of time to continue shaping that story! I guess my hope is this, that it would not be a list of accomplishments of mine that you list, but of yours and your brothers. 

                The longer I am a father the more certain I am that my role is to enrich and guide your life, the love and satisfaction I receive from my role is just a bonus. I do not want to be elevated by you for what I accomplish, but to allow you, through my life and leadership, to accomplish the desires of your heart, and to end up as a well rounded, well centered young woman. I do not know how successful I will be, and as you are my first child you have fallen into the “trial run” spot. 

                None of us outlives eternity; the life we build even if we live for 200 years is brief in comparison to what has come before and what will be after we are gone. None of the people you read about in the history books rest any better due to their names being written on those pages, or etched in stone on some monument. There is an unbending finality to time on this earth. Life is what goes on, life in your children, and life in your spirit. You don’t have to be a star athlete, rich, beautiful or possess any special gift to enrich life, be it your own or a strangers. 

                Someday my eulogy will come. Of this I am certain. If soon, I know I have lived longer than plenty, if long from now, I will have had the joy of watching you grow. By these pages you will know me, my heart and my unbound love for you. My wisdom may be found wanting, my knowledge fall short of the mark, and my strength fail with age, but my love for you will be full, and perfect, and pure. There is no measure of life I would not give for you, no wrong I could not forgive, no space between your heart and mine. You are of me, my very best, you carry my spirit and the God who watches over me is the same that watches over you. Simply, I love you, as truly as those words could ever be spoken or written.

Thursday, March 28, 2013

moving to GA

Well we have made the great migration to the East. Heading the opposite direction of the settlers just feels wrong to me, but I guess the “west” doesn’t really exist anymore as they knew it. We are settling into the new home in Newnan GA. So far you seem happy, particularly with the fact that this home has a staircase. It did break my heart when the first week we were here you kept telling me “I am going to have a party, all my friends are coming over to see me” when I knew that those friends were 1800 miles away in Phoenix. You have mentioned Anabella quite a few times, you and she are such cute friends, always holding hands, hugging and playing so well together. I really hope we can keep all those relationships as intact as possible until we move back home.


Our new home is beautiful, about 1000 square feet larger, your mother has a massive kitchen and the layout and design perfectly fits our taste. Here in Georgia pine trees are everywhere, lots of colorful birds and out away from the city like we are the air is clean and crisp. There are certainly worse places we could have ended up. I am looking forward to exploring the area and meeting new friends. You love the new church we have found, when we drop you off to bible study you wander right in with no complaints. I think at this point you are just happy to be out of the house and see some other kids.

I had to leave for the first time since we moved this week, I am actually typing this on the flight home from Mexico. Being there reminded me somewhat of being in Arizona, just a lot more brown skinned folks running around. The people I met there were great, I love the way they value relationships and seem to take a deep interest in others and have very strong families. The country itself is beautiful and full of rich history. I visited a church in Zacatecas that was built in the 1500’s with beautiful stone carvings and masonry. Currently, in the year 2013, the country struggles with battling very violent crime and rampant corruption in the government. The crime mostly stems from the drug trade- unfortunately partially Americas fault seeing as how we are the ones buying most of the drugs and therefore supplying most of the money. It’s just unfortunate seeing people live in fear of going out at night, police trucks filled with masked men armed to the teeth with machine guns patrolling the street; they are masked so the Cartels won’t kill their family if they find out their identity. I hope someday these troubles will be behind it, in my opinion the coming decades should see a new and better Mexico.

One month has gone by. Time seems to move every bit as quickly as it did back home. My stress in work has increased slightly, which is good because it means I am being challenged. Comfort in business isn’t necessarily a good thing. I am adapting to life in an office after being at home and on the road for the last 5 years. I normally get up at 5am, work out, get to the office around 7, and leave at 4:30 so I can come home and spend time with you and mom. I love coming home to my girls at the end of the day.

It is so strange to have deviated from everything that was once normal. I still don’t think it has entirely sank in. I cant explain entirely the feeling that nags at me. It keeps me aware that this is foreign, unknown, somewhat uncomfortable. This is a grand experiment in every sense. Not only being away from family and friends, but a new job for me, and a new role for your mother. Everything changed for each one of us, and I can only help but wonder what our reflections will be of this time years from now when we look back.

We ordered some new fancy leather couches for the new home. They have yet to arrive so we just put a small loveseat downstairs in the living room. Most nights the three of us end up sitting on the couch together, you cuddled up in between us. My favorite thing is when you snuggle up and burrow your head into my shoulder and say “I love my family”. When you say that I know we could be in a mud shack with no electricity or a mansion on a hill and the same things in our lives would still matter. For the first time we are more reliant on each other than anything else, which means we have a choice to grow closer, or grow colder. I am happy with the direction so far.

I love you always and forever sweet girl.

Saturday, January 19, 2013

Last Friday a man walked into a classroom and killed 20 children and 6 adults. When I heard the news my heart was stricken in a way that two years ago it would have never been. I cant imagine not being able to hold you, see you, kiss you, and just be with you ever again. It is absolutely without question my greatest fear. I cannot begin to fathom what those families are going through, and I pray that I never know that depth of sorrow.

As people do, we are searching for a reason why. There could be no answer, none that would lend any measure of comfort to the grief visited upon every decent human being who learned of the tragedy. First, we attempt to explain, then prevent a similar tragedy, lastly congratulate ourselves on the accomplishment. There will never be a cure or countermeasure for those who wish with every faculty or from complete insanity, on visiting pain to the innocent and unsuspecting. There is certainly evil in this world and it will never be fully contained and caged, while allowing us to live our carefree lives free of fear.

I feel far too old to die young these days, and I am only 28. How can one not feel that they have lived a full life when told of 5 and 6 year olds who died scared and long before their time? How can I be afraid of the very same end, though through different means, that they met? It makes me evaluate the important things in life, the things that shape my life and the peace, joy, and purpose I find in it.

I came to the conclusion last night that the greatest burden I bear is that of want. Not want for food, clothing, shelter or any other thing necessary for life, but of the superfluous. I dream of a higher paying job, with more power, to buy a bigger house, and shower those I know with gifts and more than likely myself with some luxury car I don’t need and many other things that provide a momentary high quickly dissipated by a void of meaninglessness. It is my goal to give even more generously in 2013 outside of our normal tithing, and to go without buying myself anything not absolutely necessary. When I am content with what I have, in reality what I have been given, I am absolutely more content in every facet of my life.

I think about one thing only when I rest at night, am I a good enough man, father, husband; and how can I be better. Cora someday when you are old I hope you can read this and realize the struggle that one confronts when faced with the certainty that you have but one life to live on earth. My struggle is how to live it to the fullest, not by the measure of the world, but by the measure of God and those dearest to me.

A quick note, yesterday you were sitting on the couch next to me and I did a great big stretch where I lifted my arms above my head. You asked “what are you doing daddy”, to which I replied “just stretching”, a moment later you did the exact same thing and said “ohhh, im streaching”. You are absolutely the most precious thing in my life, and I am so thankful that God gave me your mother who stuck it out with me, until we made you. I will never be able to fully convey the depth and breadth and entirety of my love for you. My hope is that you know your father and failing that, that you know but one thing. I love you, completely, without condition, without constraint. I will always love you, and nothing can ever separate you from that love.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012



Thanksgiving is right around the corner. One day to focus on all that we are truly thankful for in life, to count our blessings, and I suppose survey our disappointments. This year has not been bereft of disappointment, it has hung like a fog around your mother and I, the children we hoped for, and never got to know. It would seem strange to read it in these pages, as if I dwell upon it without ceasing, but please know my life is full, and you have made it overflow.
I have never known such good grace from God. He has given me your mother to make me a better man, and then you through your mother to continue that work even more. I am grateful for this, that you have shown me what it is to love without ceasing, hesitation, and even knowledge of why or how I could love so completely. The smallest moments with you are greater than so many others I used to cling to. I would not trade or part with those moments for all the things this world tells me to seek after- all the material and physical pleasure and pursuits in this life are nothing compared to the joy of having you as my daughter, and your mother as my wife.
If everything in my life I hold dearly to fell away, as someday it must, I would still be blessed. My house, car, career, could vanish and yet I would have blessings. It is too simple to expect only good, and scoff at the misfortune that comes into your life as if you warrant a better hand than the one you were dealt. I know what I would have earned on my own, and it would be bleak indeed.
I did not earn the blessings in my life, so how could I complain when the misfortune I did earn comes to visit me? If I have one hope for you it is that you do not expect a perfect life, so that you will be grateful for the blessings within the imperfect one you live. In that way you can savor them, thank God for them, and treasure them as true gifts.
It may have been sometime since I last wrote, you are recently two years old, your blonde hair has grown longer and your eyes even brighter. You give me great big hugs and enjoy cuddling on the couch. You often times break into song, and will repeat things I have said weeks after word that I had no idea you even heard in the first place. When I get you up in the morning and open your curtains you always exclaim “it’s a beautiful day”. I hope that never changes, I love your innocence and unadulterated joy in such small things.

All my days I am thankful for you. I love you always and nothing will ever separate you from that love.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012



                I have been thinking a lot about times I have failed in my life. Not necessarily a happy subject, but one I go back to from time to time in order to avoid the mistakes of my past while preparing for my future.
                Some of my failures have been more about my career, like when I tried to become a police officer, but was barred because I had sold my friends some prescription pain pills. Now, before you start imagining that I was a drug dealer I will tell you that I didn’t make more than $8 and only sold them because I did not want to take them myself. That was a tough time, getting rejected from a job I felt called to do, but I have a great job now that I am very grateful for and fulfilled by. I also think about the years I wasted so much time after graduating college. I had my job which paid well and was challenging but looking back I know I had too much spare time that I should have put into getting my MBA or otherwise improving myself. I don’t want to say that I am ungrateful for all the good things that happened those years, but I just wish I would have pushed myself to be at my best.
                Some failures have to do with hurting loved ones. I think about the time I got back from Catalina Island in the 6th grade. I think I was gone 3 nights, my first time away from home without my parents for that long. My mom was so excited to see me when I got home and she said something like “come over here and give me a hug” but I walked right by her. I don’t know why I did it; maybe I thought it would make me feel more grown up. The one thing I do know is I have regretted the way it hurt her ever since. I mean this is so many years after it happened and yet I can go back to that moment and relive the way it happened so vividly.
                Another one that comes to mind is when your Aunt Stephanie and Uncle Rory had a miscarriage. We were, and hopefully as you are reading this still are, close friends with them. We had grown somewhat apart from them around that time, I don’t know why, sometimes it just happens. I think I might have called Rory to say I was sorry about what had happened, but I never went over, never did anything to show how much I cared and felt for them in their grief. I have always prided myself as being the kind of friend that is there no matter what. I think about that time and how I failed them and I feel so much regret. Sometimes you don’t necessarily hurt another person with your actions, but inside you know without a doubt you should have done more, even though no one was expecting you to.
                Then there is your mother. We had a very rough couple of years of marriage, fights and harsh words and bitter resentment. In retrospect it was a continual failure of mine to be the husband to her I promised to be, and to be the man God had called me to be. I was selfish, immature, and focused on my happiness and desires over hers. Thankfully your mother has more patience, perhaps stubbornness, than most, and we made it through that time. It doesn’t mean the rest is smooth sailing, it just means we are in the same boat to help each other now.  
                Lately my failure has been altogether different. Your mother and I have miscarried three times now. Each one seems to hit her harder than the last, and with each I see her hope and joy drained more and more. I don’t know what to say, I don’t know what to do or even feel. I just know I should be doing more for her, but I don’t know what it looks like. One of the hardest things in life is to watch others suffer and be unable to help them. Sometimes I even get upset because I don’t understand the way she feels, how she wants to avoid certain situations and her negative perspective. I am not saying its ok that I feel that way; I just want to be honest with you about how I feel and what I struggle with. I have to keep in mind that each person goes through life in a unique way, and its not up to me to fix her and force her to see a better way. My job is to love her, support her, listen, and try my best to understand without judgments. Like in all married life my job is to be strong, lead by example and carry us through the dark times when maybe I am the only one with the hope to carry on.
                Having you as our sweet little girl has made us above all things desire more children. We love spending time with you so much, and watching you grow and change. We take such delight in all the new things you learn to say and do. Lately you have been so sweet to me, always coming to find me with a kiss or a hug, wanting to cuddle and play. I think about you 20 times a day at least when I am traveling for work, in the airport each child that I see makes me miss you more and more. Knowing you has been so wonderful that all we want is more of the joy you bring us by being a part of our family.
                Failures are part of life. There are goals that remain unaccomplished, friends hurt, plans left unfulfilled. Those missteps make the successes all the sweeter though, they make the success we find so much more meaningful. I will never forget the triumphs in my life that came after struggle; the good years of marriage after the bad, graduating from college after so many tough exams. I hope that your failures lead you to your greatest accomplishments, that you can come to me always to talk them through, and that even though there may be tough seasons in your life you will never be a disappointment to me.

Monday, June 11, 2012

Working for the man



               Well it looks as though my professional career is coming full circle. Six years ago I started working for Eaton Corporation in their electrical division, moved to the fluid power division, then took a job with another company called Cooper. Last week while your mother and I celebrated 7 years of marriage in Kauai I found out that Eaton was acquiring Cooper. In a few months I will be back to where I started, though in a different role, if they keep me around.
                This whole thing has got me thinking about my professional life, what I want to do, where I want to do it, and what the purpose of it all is. I like to make money, I look to find ways to make more money, starting a business, investments, getting promotions, I spend my time thinking about it, striving for it. Yet it doesn’t make me any happier, I guess I feel more respected by others, more secure knowing that we have financial reserves and I don’t have to stress myself out about paying bills, but not an increase of happiness or peace. I like to travel, spoil your mother, and you, and buy myself the occasional novelty. None of that leads to lasting fulfillment, just temporary highs. I guess I like to spend the most on travel, since those memories I can carry with me forever and the experiences bond you to the people you share them with.
                All of that rambling to say this. I don’t know how much I should sacrifice to gain something that may not be worth the gaining. We are conditioned in almost every country to look upon wealth as the ultimate goal, that those who have it are better, happier, and sexier than the rest of us. I think that view is the same as any stereotype, that is to say, false. There is a large part of me that wants to drive a nice car, live in a massive house, take lavish vacations and buy clothes that cost 400% more than they should, all so that I feel, and that others think, that I am important, special, worthy of respect and a possessor of power over this world. If I accomplish it all, I will die the same death as the poorest of the poor, the same darkness, the same ultimate end, just a different journey to the same destination. Though we cannot ask, I doubt someone with billions of dollars feels any more at peace with death in the final moment than someone with one dollar.
                So what is your father to do? I imagine taking a small 9 to 5 job somewhere in a beautiful location, working with my hands and coming home to your mother and you every night. I imagine owning a small business that will never make me rich or envied, but will leave me peaceful and content. I also imagine sending you to college, having a vacation home for us, continually challenging myself in my career and allowing us to see the world. My dreams clash with one another and I struggle to know which is wiser. In the end I know God will direct my steps as surely as he has thus far in my life. When I was young, and even starting college the life I live now and the career I have had was completely unknown to me, life just happens as you prepare for it.
                I am telling you about all these things to share my heart, so you know what your father struggles with. I want to be a good man, a good husband, and a good father. I think finances play a part in each of those roles. I don’t just want to “put bread on the table” I want to surround that table with a nice house in a good neighborhood, and make sure we see the world outside our door. I want to use the talents God has given me to provide for the church as well as for my family, so that my earthy gains can have a lasting impact in the lives of others, which is why your mother and I tithe and why we went to Africa, and why someday we will take you back.
                I will tell you this right now, in any life there is a measure of success and failure. There are those who make very little, but live great lives, and there are those who have more than can be imagined who are mired in misery. I will love you no matter what your financial success is in life; my only concern is that you have a purpose.
                One great thing about any failures I face is that your mother and you are there for me. My two beautiful ladies. At the end of the day no matter the job I do, the stress in my career, I will always have the two of you. You can be certain that the reverse will also always be true.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Washington Vacation



                 Do you know what is a poor combination? 5 hour flights and 18 month old children! We took you on a trip to the east coast, to see your moms cousin get married. It is so much fun to have you with us, but, as you will someday understand, a great deal less relaxing!
                Its too bad you wont remember it but, we saw where the constitution was signed, the liberty bell, a couple of the Smithsonian museums, the holocaust museum- which thank the Lord you slept through, the Washington, Lincoln, Jefferson, Vietnam, WWII, Korean, MLK and FDR monuments and the battle field where the civil war started. It was a busy week and we made the most of our time. All in all you did well, and it was fun to cuddle in the same bed again like we used to do when you were a little baby.
                You seem to change so much each week, now you try to repeat almost everything you hear, which means your father has to watch his tongue! Your putting together three word phrases and your facial expressions are multiplying. Each day I see my little baby girl grow up a little more, I don’t wish I could stop it, I am just glad that I get to take it all in and spend this time with you.
                It made me think walking around all those monuments last week. I was fascinated how hard we work, and how much we struggle to be remembered for something. It is not only the people who are passed away who wanted to be remembered, we look at those monuments and we think it gives us a piece of them to hold onto. It doesn’t matter if it is a national tourist attraction or a simple headstone in a lonely cemetery. While we are living we struggle to matter, and to be noticed and appreciated. After the living are gone we erect monuments so that we can hold onto them a bit longer, and pretend that their lives had a significance that will last.
                I struggle with the same things, wanting to achieve ever more in life, more money, nicer things, more skills and accolades. Yet I know when I die that nothing will make my death distinguishable from any other, nothing will make it easier. I doubt my last thought will be thank God I lived in that nice house, or worked so hard for so many years to buy all that stuff and have all those people be impressed by me. I would think about you, your mother, and if I lived a good life that God would be proud of.
                People don’t dwell on mortality as they used to, death is not a subject often discussed in detail or great length, because it is troubling when you are enjoying life to think about it ending. As I grow older and older I feel as though I have lived well, but I want to do better. Be a better husband, father, man of God, friend, brother, son. I want to live a life I can be at peace about, no matter who is watching. There will be no monument to me when I go. My name will not be etched in stone, or even in the pages of history, but none of that troubles me. For those things too shall pass, I would rather be forgotten by the world and remembered by God.
                I hope as you grow and experience life you will make wise decisions, and follow a path that will make me proud. Even if you stray from that path I will always have faith and trust that you will return. I don’t daydream about you accomplishing great things, or being famous. I daydream about you living a full life, with love, peace, passion, fulfillment, joy, laughter, and purpose. I will always be proud of you; you will always be my joy.