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“Son of a…” (Humor -- Father's Day) [Ecumenical]
CatholicExchange.com ^ | June 14, 2008 | Tom Purcell

Posted on 06/14/2008 1:45:26 PM PDT by Salvation

“Son of a…”

June 14th, 2008 by Tom Purcell

Get this: Dads are essential to kids.

According to the National Fatherhood Initiative, kids who grow up without dads are more likely to grow up poor, drop out of school, end up in jail and encounter numerous other struggles in life than kids who grow up with dads.

This information comes as no shock to most men. We know that boys are prone to stupidity and that the creature best suited to taming them is the like-minded fellow called dad.

When I was five, my father told me to stop jumping around the tub, but I jumped anyway. I slipped and hit my head on a ceramic soap dish. It busted into a dozen pieces. My father responded to my stupidity the way he often did.

“Son of a !!!”

I pretended to be hurt, but he knew I was fine. He knew a noggin as hard as mine could have busted a dozen soap dishes without so much as a bruise. Breaking things was one of my talents.

Over the years, I clogged a toilet with an apple core, shattered a picture window with a baseball and hit a golf ball through a neighbor’s window (I fled, was later apprehended, and had to mow a lot of lawns to pay my father back for the cost of a new window).

I made it hard for my father to fix the things I broke though. This is because I lost many of his tools over the years. I was permitted to use them to build shacks and go-carts, so long as I put them back where they belonged.

But I didn’t always put them back. He’d usually find them lying in the yard — after hitting them with the lawnmower blade — which prompted a familiar reaction.

“Son of a !!!”

When I was a teen, I destroyed more expensive items, such as automobiles. My father made the mistake of purchasing a 1979 Ford Pinto with a powerful six-cylinder motor — it could burn rubber at will.  

When he discovered that a right-rear tire only six weeks old was worn to the threads, he had but one response.

“Son of a !!!”

In addition to costing him money, I saw it as my duty to butt heads with him — or, to be more precise, it was his duty to butt heads with me. He grew up without a father and he remembered the dumb things he did in his youth.

He knew that most any boy is only one or two knuckle-headed decisions away from heading off in a dangerous direction. His job was to keep me in line, a task that was often unpleasant for him.

In high school, I began making a lot of money running a stone-masonry business, and I announced I was going to buy my own car. But the unenlightened old man made me do something stupid with the money: save it for college. I was furious and fought him hard, but he wouldn’t relent.

The friction my father caused me, I now know, was also the basis for my respect for him. A father gives a boy someone to look up to and model himself after. And all that friction over the years polishes an average lump of coal into a diamond.

I’m glad people are doing studies that confirm what a lot of folks have always known about fathers. When boys don’t have committed fathers to agitate — and when caring fathers aren’t around to inflict unpleasantness on their sons — the result is too often tragic.

When dads are around, things work out in the end. My dad had the satisfaction of seeing me turn out all right. A few years after I graduated from college and bought my first nice car, I let him take a drive. He revved the motor, dropped the transmission into gear, then burned rubber all the way up the road.

I had but one thing to say to that.

“Son of a !!!”

 

Tom Purcell's weekly political humor column runs in newspapers and Web sites across America. His email address is TomPurcell@aol.com; his web address is www.TomPurcell.com.



TOPICS: Catholic; Humor; Moral Issues; Religion & Culture
KEYWORDS: catholic; fathers; humor
What do all you sons (and fathers) out there have to say? Even daughters and fathers.

A cute little article.

Happy Father's Day to all you fathers, grandfather, stepfathers and fosterfathers.

Please share your own fatherly love/experience stories with us.

1 posted on 06/14/2008 1:45:26 PM PDT by Salvation
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To: nickcarraway; sandyeggo; Lady In Blue; NYer; ELS; Pyro7480; livius; Catholicguy; RobbyS; ...
Catholic Discussion Ping!

Please notify me via FReepmail if you would like to be added to or taken off the Catholic Discussion Ping List.

2 posted on 06/14/2008 1:51:12 PM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: All
The Blueprint for Heroic Family Life [Fathers' Day] [Ecumenical]

Honoring Thy Fathers

A Father's Tough Love

Children Who Have An Active Father Figure Have Fewer Psychological And Behavioral Problems

Where Have All the Christian Men Gone? My Conversation with John Eldredge

The Transforming Power of Prayer [Part 1] (Catholic Man)

The Transforming Power of Prayer, Part 2 (Catholic Man)

The 10 Paradoxes of Fatherhood, There is a certain immediacy about motherhood that cannot

The Story of Champions [Father's Day]

What Makes a Man a Hero? [Father's Day]

The New Catholic Manliness

3 posted on 06/14/2008 2:05:47 PM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Salvation

Girls need their dads, too. My dad is the one who instilled in me a love of history, the ability to think logically, and he kept me grounded. Prone to female emotions, had it not been for my father’s calming, introspective, conservative influence for balance, I would probably be a liberal, artsy bohemian (my dad declared me a “bohemian” in college) Democrat today.

Thanks, dad. Can’t wait to give you that 6 volume set of WWII in Europe DVD’s. I know you’re gonna love it!


4 posted on 06/14/2008 2:18:07 PM PDT by FrdmLvr
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To: Salvation

My father is very special. I’ve always felt that he sympathized with my wilder ideas - like having eight children - while my mother just thought I was cracked. But I appreciate both of them.


5 posted on 06/14/2008 4:01:59 PM PDT by Tax-chick (Drill! Drill!! Drill!!!)
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To: FrdmLvr

My father-in-law is going to send us those as soon as he finishes watching them!


6 posted on 06/14/2008 4:02:53 PM PDT by Tax-chick (Drill! Drill!! Drill!!!)
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To: Salvation

My dad wanted to be a marine biologist. He got through two years of college before he married and began his family. Each of his kids headed off to college with Dad’s financial support whenever he could do so, though mostly we worked our way through college). Whenever I would come home from college, my head stuffed with collegial knowledge and “wisdom” he was always able to one-up me. Whatever I discussed, he seemed to know at least one step further than I had learned. I would return to school ready to attack the next level and always find myself behind my dad. He was (and is) a prodigious reader and our home was filled with books. Today my home has hundreds of volumes of mostly nonfiction works. He who wanted to learn so much taught us by teaching himself and challenging himself intellectually. He is still our fount of wisdom and knowledge even though his kids all have either Masters or Doctorates. Happy Father’s Day, Dad. And thanks.


7 posted on 06/14/2008 11:28:15 PM PDT by caseinpoint (Don't get thickly involved in thin things)
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To: Salvation

This is cute, but it’s also a very serious issue. Too many in our culture have sought to denigrate the important role of fathers.

I sent a link to my son who, along with his dear wife, will be making me a grandmother for the first time in a number of months.


8 posted on 06/16/2008 4:33:53 PM PDT by Bigg Red
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To: caseinpoint

**He is still our fount of wisdom and knowledge even though his kids all have either Masters or Doctorates.**

What a great case in point! (Pardon the pun!)


9 posted on 06/16/2008 4:48:05 PM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Bigg Red

Congtatulations! I will be a grandmother for the ninth time in December.


10 posted on 06/16/2008 4:48:56 PM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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