Saturday, June 14, 2014

Father's Day - A Day For Offering Thanks... But Tainted by Paradox

Traditionally in all family circles within our society... Father's Day has been set aside as a special day to recognize and fete all Fathers for the gifts they have offered their family members. Many fathers have blessed each of us with their generous, loving presence and wisdom since infancy and right up into our adult and married parental lives. "I" .. count my Self among those blessed individuals fortunate enough trough birth alone to have been accorded this rich blessing. My Dad was... and continues to be... even after his passing, a metronome which keeps and sustains the tempo of my own personal journey and principles. I carry his spirit and model of goodness in my heart... Forever!


"Keep Smiling" - watercolour on paper 10x14 inches  A 100th Birthday tribute to the "little BIG Man" who taught me to face the world ... aways with a smile and the courage to honour and speak to my own Truth and principles.

This Father's Day is special in our Sherman Family because my eldest son Andrew has blessed us with a first child of his own... Malcolm Justin Michael Sherman. With this happy event, the circle has come around full for Andrew and I. He now has a "bowman" to introduce our beloved River to when the time arrives to do so. I am exceedingly proud of he and Melissa and know that wee Mac will enjoy a life as filled with Love.. good memories and adventures as those that Andrew and I have shared together as Father and Son.

Happy First Father's Day Andrew! I am proud!


I require little space in this post to offer forward my gratitude and my remen\mbrance of my own precious Dad... for there never passes a day when his memory and presence are not in the fore of my everyday life and activities.Together... we "made it so" through a common journey which I continue to live out  for us both... and in his honour.

Ironically... and sadly for "Me"... my warm and fuzzy feelings about this Father's Day end in celebrating Father's day 2014 and in the next part of this post I will try to explain why this is so. I inherited a generous and giving spirit.As well, I inherited a peculiar sensitivity to recognizing need and others the needs and an absolute compulsion to serve their need.  It has been a gift which has served me well, but with that gift comes a price. One is totally vulnerable to the pain and sadness of those we serve and it often overrides our own sense of happiness.

"I am such a happy man. I love going to work each day, I have a beautiful wife, a beautiful son and another baby on the way... Rachel, we are so blessed." These are thoughts and words that could well have come from my own mouth.... but they aren't. They are the words from RCMP constable Dave Ross, age 32 to his wife Rachel. Ross, along with two of his comrades were mercilessly gunned down last week in Moncton, New Brunswick while responding to a call that a man was roaming the streets heavily armed.


All of these beautiful thoughts and another special Father have been ripped away from this grief-stricken Larche family circle... left to survive... if they can with the large gaping unfixable hole that scarce days ago seemed untouchable. It speaks to m of the uncertainty and unfairness of Life... but in all truth... "fair" is but a human word to cope with such a loss that is unimaginable... even surreal.

I am not the only citizen rocked to the core by this senseless tragedy and act of premeditated carnage. I feel a sense of shame for my self and countrymen that I have... even in a small way contributed to the media driven criticism of certain events in their handling of other dangerous incidents. They daily faced the possibility of the same fate with every call they answered. They and their families always expected them to return... to put down the garage door left open... to return to the barbecue they had left without questioning... to sit down together and have the meal that was interrupted by duty and to resume the family life they deserved and valued as we do.

Deb and I know this feeling in spades. Her son Spencer is a Sergeant at the RCMP detachment in Cranbrook, BC. We know first hand of the fear that a wife and family has to go to the door.... or to feel the overwhelming grief that floods out all good for a long time in their own precious lives. They are a very large family.... knitted together in a special fashion which only brothers-in-arms can truly feel or understand. That feeling of family and kinship applies as well to service men and women, firemen, police and all other citizens who put their lives in harm's way on our behalf.

I cannot presume to tell you how to celebrate your Father's Day in your homes. But wherever you are... hug and tell your Father/ Husband /Dad that you love them and how much that they mean to you. It could... when life has its miserable and unpredictable way... be that very last time you can do so. Do that every single day... as if it were possibly your last last meeting. In this fashion... you will both feel... deeply blessed and special. The families of Constables Douglas Larche, David Ross and Fabrice Gevaudan will be included in my own Father's Day moments of remembrance. I owe them and their families that deep debt of gratitude.




In closing this post, I apologize for any "downer" feelings that I might have brought to and shared with you. It is my greater wish to wish all Father's and their families a very enjoyable and Happy Father's Day from The Paint Box Gang in Rockport!

We feel blessed.... today.... that Spencer , Jody and our beautiful Grand Girls Ava and Ella are safe and spared this tragedy. But they... and we... are not untouched by the loss of three fine Fathers and the grief their wives and families will be forced to bear for the remainder of their lives. Their ultimate sacrifice matters to me.

Rich blessings to ALL!!!




8 comments:

  1. A moving post, Bruce and a reminder to us all to count each day as a blessing.

    Talking of blessings, little Malcolm is looking mighty fine in his shirt that matches his Granddads. (-from the photo of you at the bottom of the blog)

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  2. Dear Lisa! ... Thank you for getting in touch again!

    Your "new" family circle now includes a proud Dad I am sure. "He" is indeed blessed to have you and your new child at his side now for life! Hold each other safely... and share the magic which only can be found in watching a child grow in one's own family garden!

    Rich Father's Day blessings to your home from ours.

    Good Painting and Parenting!

    Warmest regards,
    Bruce

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  3. Happy Father's Day, Bruce. Unfortunately, senseless tragedy is very commonplace these days. I too suffer the hurts of others deeply! There are nutjobs all over the world, it seems. We have quite a high concentration of them here in the U. S., as I am sure you know. Absolutely no reflection on you or your country in any way. My heart goes out to those families as well. I think my mom told me that these types of things even happened in what I think of as the "good ol' days" from before my time. She said the difference between then and now is the media which brings all such stories home. We've seen similar since the days of Adam and Eve, Cain and Abel. I hope those children will always love, respect, and admire their dads (and mom?) as you do your own. Your parents gave you the best gift ever. Love your painting to your dad.

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  4. Good afternoon Sherry!... Thanks for checking in and for adding your very cogent and relative thoughts to mine! You have said it all well... and I share your sentiments exactly.

    My parents indeed have left me feeling very blessed for their gifts which continue to sustain me. My job is to pass it forward... and I try very desperately to do so. Hard shoes to fill!

    Enjoy a great day with your hubby and family!

    Good Painting!
    Warmest regards,
    Bruce

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  5. Love the "Keep Smiling" tribute!

    Happy Fathers Day, Bruce!

    My heart and prayers are with those brave souls that serve us all.

    Blessings
    Dean

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  6. Hi there Dean!... Thanks for the visit and supportive words!

    We are greatly blessed to have undividuals with courage and conscience within our society willing to step up... and be counted. Like you... I greatly respect them and their work every day!

    Good Painting!
    Wartmest regards,
    Bruce

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  7. Thank you for this post. You expressed in words what I could not. Such a sad sad thing.

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  8. Good morning Wendy!... Thank you for your supportive words this morning. It helps to know that others think and feel the same emotions and sense of loss... and pride in celebrating what is "the best" of who we are.

    There is comfort in knowing that... and that we are not alone... at these terrible moments in life.

    Good Painting!
    Warmest regards,
    Bruce

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