Dad
by
Jeffrey A. Tucker
DIGG THIS
I know it's
not Father's Day but I can't help thinking about him anyway. He
was really crazy in a wonderful sort of way. Where to start? Oh,
let's talk about money. For years he directed music at our family's
church. He was outstanding. He was a composer too. He once wrote
a full-blown cantata about the history of this particular church,
complete with songs about its founding and development. It was darn
good.
He wrote for
9 months, we practiced it for full choir and orchestra for three
months, and performance lasted an hour. It was smashing – and then
gone. Why? He was somehow driven that way, to "throw away" his talents
on small endeavors to make people happy.
He eventually
became too busy to do the music anymore – he was actually a professor
of history and education – and reluctantly resigned. The church
hired a music director at a high salary, $45,000 a year, as I recall.
He asked the deacons of the church why, if they were willing to
do that, had they never offered to pay for his services. "You never
asked," they said.
Yes, I can
recall that he was a bit bitter about it, but would he have repeated
the same if he had to do it over? Of course! He was crazy that way.
Once we were
walking on some dusty trail near Fort Davis in nowhere Texas, and
an old Mexican man came up to us excitedly. I figured trouble was
brewing.
The old man
said:
"Al Tucker?
You taught me to read! Thank God for you!"
Dad was a bit
embarrassed but he exchanged pleasantries. The old man kissed my
father's hand, went on his way.
"When did you
teach him to read?" I asked.
"Oh about three
years ago. I used to come here and teach a class for adults who
couldn't read."
"No pay?"
"Of course
not," and he looked at me like I was crazy.
He was like
that. There must have been hundreds of people like this who benefited
from his charity. Why did he do it all? Heaven knows.
The thing is
that he was convinced that the world was chock full of treasures
that we couldn't see. We would go walking in the desert and he would
pick up a stone and say that probably some Indian centuries ago
used this rock in a spear. I believed him. Later I became more skeptical
of these wild claims. But then I realized that Dad thinks treasures
are everywhere, waiting to be found and appreciated.
This was how
he was with people. He was mostly wrong of course. But he never
stopped searching.
His kids were
among the treasures. My brother claims that he once gave mouth-to-mouth
resuscitation to our pet duck that was drowning in a flood. I don't
recall this but I believe it.
Mostly people
remember my Dad as a brilliant eccentric. I can see why. I visited
his academic office once after I had long ago left home. I wanted
to see his books, but all he wanted to talk about was his new bullwhip
he had hanging on the wall. He took it down to show me how he could
crack it. He stood in the hallway and whipped that thing around
up and down the hall. His colleagues poked their heads out of their
doors and then shut them again, figuring that Al was up to his usual
stunts. Crazy!
He was a darn
good guitarist, though he never thought so. Before he died, he attended
a Christmas party I was at. It was rather dull, and he couldn’t
stand it. So he found a guitar in the house and began to sing and
yodel cowboy Christmas songs. Wow, did that place come to life!
He said later that he worried that he had embarrassed me. Nuts!
I couldn't have been more proud.
He always accommodated
my love for pets. I kept a hamster but after a long while, I forgot
to feed him. "Gilbert" became very weak and by the time I figured
out what was happening, it was probably too late. I took him to
Dad, who quickly found an eyedropper and filled it with sugar water.
He fed Gilbert as much as he could. Gilbert died anyway. My dad
and I cried together.
I'll never
be the man he was. I know that. I gave up trying long ago. But a
year ago, my son came to me with a sick hamster on the verge of
death. I was ready to let him go. I didn't want to do what my father
did. Didn't want to instill false hope. Mostly, I didn't want to
go through that painful experience again. But I did it anyway. I
got an eyedropper and filled it with sugar water and fed the hamster.
To
my astonishment, the hamster lived. I know for sure that Dad was
smiling down from Heaven. In this small way, in the smallest way,
I did something he didn't do. I know he was proud. We sons benefit
so much from our fathers' love and appreciation –and how much pain
we bring them in any case – even though they surely know that we
can never lived up to their ideal.
On occasion
I've visited the church I grew up in. No one there today remembers
my Father. But they are still singing the songs he wrote.
September
19, 2007
Jeffrey
Tucker [send him mail]
is editorial vice president of www.Mises.org.
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