海角大神

海角大神 / Text

School of Dad: This Father鈥檚 Day, 6 writers treasure lessons they鈥檝e learned

This Father鈥檚 Day, 6 writers honor their dads and the lessons they passed down 鈥 often by simply living their values.

By Contributing writers

Pivoting, adapting, and learning through life鈥檚 curveballs. Turning inward to grapple with the daily challenges of adulthood. Wrestling with preconceived notions. Showing love, quietly but surely. In this special Father鈥檚 Day collection, six writers share what their fathers and father figures taught them 鈥 by setting shining examples to follow.

Mr. Street smarts

There鈥檚 a word in Filipino that doesn鈥檛 quite translate into English: diskarte.

It鈥檚 used to describe someone with street smarts 鈥 resourceful and quick-thinking. Faced with a challenge, they adapt. Someone with diskarte might not have money or connections, but they鈥檒l find a way.

My dad lived this word. As a child, I had a front-row seat to a master class in diskarte.

My grandparents, who never finished elementary school, worked themselves to the bone to provide for their family of seven. My dad understood that education was his best shot at a better future. He earned a degree in chemical engineering and landed a job with Kodak in Hong Kong, where my sisters and I were born.

Years later, he made a bold move, returning to the Philippines during the tail end of the Marcos dictatorship, while others who could were fleeing. He left Kodak as digital technology was taking off, years before it would transform the company completely.聽

Knowing nothing about real estate or construction, he started his own construction company. He learned everything 鈥 plumbing, windows, flooring, roofing 鈥 simply by asking questions and making mistakes. His business thrived 鈥 and so did we.聽

In today鈥檚 unpredictable world, where a degree no longer guarantees stability and political tides shift overnight, my dad鈥檚 diskarte has served me well.

Lose a job? Pivot.

Have to start over? That鈥檚 life.

Keep learning. Keep moving. Keep trying.

Just as he did.

鈥 Sherilyn Siy

A surprise in the glove box

My dad was a quiet man and, like many of his generation, more a critic than a cheerleader. He didn鈥檛 like it when I slept late, he grumbled about my book-buying habit (鈥淭hey鈥檙e free at the library鈥), and on the rare report card loaded with A鈥檚, he鈥檇 zero in on the solitary B.

I craved encouragement and praise, but he didn鈥檛 speak that language. The best compliment I got from him was after he鈥檇 spent two days teaching me to drive a stick shift. 鈥淵ou drive too fast,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut you鈥檙e a good driver.鈥 I filed that away like a gem.聽

A few years later, after several rejections, I finally landed my dream job at a newspaper. He sighed, disappointed it wasn鈥檛 full time.

No matter, I was thrilled to be there, delighted to see my name in print. If I mentioned my latest piece, he鈥檇 change the subject and ask instead when I鈥檇 have benefits or work normal hours.聽

A few months later, he passed away unexpectedly. I offered to help clean out his truck. In the glove box was a small stack of newspaper clippings. My stories. The edges were worn, the paper soft at the creases 鈥 handled often, kept like treasures.聽

My father taught me that people show love in different ways, a lesson that has served me well as the mother of two sons. Love doesn鈥檛 always appear the way we expect or want it to. Sometimes, it lives in the folds.聽

鈥 Courtenay Rudzinski

Schooled by a scholar

In my childhood home the shelves burst with books: scholarly volumes of foreign policy and history, mysteries, tomes in Latin and Japanese, biographies, and fiction. On the floor, waist-high piles of books tottered like miniature leaning towers of Pisa.聽

My father has always been an avid learner and reader. As a boy, I recall him reading every night on the couch. Whenever he came across a word he didn鈥檛 know, he would write it down on an index card to look up later, and encouraged me to do the same. To this day, he chews through books like a goat eating grass: steady, consistent, unrelenting.聽

Born in a blue-collar Polish neighborhood in Detroit, the son of a homemaker and a factory worker, Dad was the first in his family to graduate from high school. He attended seminary school, then college, and then got his Ph.D. in East Asian history. He studied in Japan and met my mom there.

He bequeathed to me a genuine love of learning. Not learning in order to get something, but learning for its own sake.聽

He has always encouraged me to wrestle with ideas and uncomfortable truths, to challenge my worldview, even if it makes me change my mind. In a world where we all too often pick out our team jersey, superglue it to our bodies, and flee to our preferred echo chamber, my dad鈥檚 freethinking spirit is one I cherish.聽

鈥 Zachary Przystup

Floating on faith

It took me a long time to learn to swim. I had an understandable fear of sinking. My father did his best to allay this concern. When I was 10 years old, he began taking me to the pool at the local YMCA, where I would lie on my back across his outstretched arms as he gently repeated, 鈥淭he water wants you to float. Your body wants to float.鈥澛

But no matter how hard I tried to believe this, when he removed his arms, I sank like a stone.聽

However, the instruction continued, week after week. My dad鈥檚 persistence was a product of experience; mine was born of not wanting to let him down. The triumph came after two months of patient attempts to simply float. My father withdrew his arms, and there I lay, upon the water, serene and capable in this first step toward actually swimming.聽

When I think back, I wonder: Was it the water that held me up? Was it my father鈥檚 supportive arms? Or maybe it was something more challenging for a child to grasp: my dad鈥檚 unfaltering faith in me.

鈥 Robert Klose

Talking man-to-man

My father was very handy, and when I was growing up, he did most of the work on our cars. Passing our garage Saturday mornings, I鈥檇 often hear Daddy in spirited conversation, though I could see only one set of legs jutting out from beneath our old Ford.

Whom was my father talking to while he drained the oil or checked a leaky radiator? Daddy was talking to himself.聽

In a household that included a wife, six kids, and a couple of grandparents, my father didn鈥檛 lack conversation partners. But talking to himself was a favorite pastime.

Despite his many responsibilities, Daddy鈥檚 calm assurance grew from his power to talk himself through whatever each day brought.

Like my father I also talk to myself, while cooking dinner, mowing the lawn, or rounding the block on an afternoon walk. These one-sided colloquies have become a welcome source of reflection, helping me to be a better husband, father, and friend.

I have my dad to thank for showing me that when you need someone to talk to, it鈥檚 OK to start with you.

鈥 Danny Heitman

The men who molded me

When I think about manhood, I think of gumbo, a dish that requires many ingredients to make it delicious. That is the best way to describe the tribe of men who nurtured me.聽

I didn鈥檛 have a father growing up, but I had a village of men who cared about me.聽

My grandfather was one of only three adults in my life whom I never heard curse. He was patient and always encouraged me to work hard and not to take the easy way out. My Uncle Charlie showed me the importance of self-confidence and told me that he loved me, and that he believed I could do anything in life that I wanted.聽

I graduated from college because Uncle Charlie, the first in the family to attend college, laid the groundwork for me. He taught me how to knot a tie and to look another man in the eye when I spoke to him.

My Uncle Bernard showed me how to take care of my responsibilities by always taking care of his, and by consistently showing up in my life.聽

I cherish the jewels that these men gave me over the years.

鈥 Ira Porter