From One Father to Another, Happy Fatherโs Day

Happy Fatherโs Day
Three simple words: So simple, in fact, that to most dads (of course, not all) the significance of the card is probably scanned over and put on a โmental shelfโ somewhere. I saw it with my Fatherโฆ.I see it with a lot of my friends who are fathers to normally adapting kids as well. Letโs face it, guys arenโt supposed to be โmushyโ or โsentimentalโ. Iโm not saying we arenโt sensitive, or sentimental, but rather that we arenโt supposed to show it outwardly or openly. At least that was what a lot of my generation (end of the Baby-Boomer era) was taught. But, a lot of my friends who are fathers take for granted some of the most basic of things as simply โa givenโ: learning to read, write, express emotions in writing, stream together some words on a card. To them these things happen when theyโre not even looking; their child goes to school and โpoofโ, one day their child starts writing simple cards on folded manilla paper. Simple, right? Doesnโt everyoneโs kids do thisโฆ
This is not the case in my life. This is not the case in a lot of menโs lives. For me, each Fatherโs Day is a reminder of primarily two things: how far weโve come and how far we have yet to go. Donโt get me wrong, we have come a long way, but that, in and of itself, doesnโt prevent me from wanting/wishing/hoping that things will continue to get better and better for my child. I canโt say โheyโฆโฆ.weโre good, we donโt need to make any more improvements hereโฆโฆletโs take it easy for the rest of our livesโ. Truth be told, can any parent ever say that? We innately want our children to do well, to reach their potential and to be happy. The journey, simply put, for us takes longer, will probably have more twists and turns, might be filled with a touch more heartbreak and heartache and may not have a clear destination in sight. That doesnโt mean that I donโt still long for โnormalcyโโฆโฆit just means that โnormalcyโ for me has taken on a different meaning.
I am the proud father to two remarkable daughters. One will have a โtypicalโ path as most parents of non-special needs children might envision (marriage, kids, career, total independence, etcโฆ) while the other will have a different, yet still directed and guided, path. As a father and as a man, I canโt help but notice the differences. These differences DO NOT mean that one will have a better, or more fulfilled life, than the other, but rather that they will be different and I notice these differences.
Related: Fatherโs Perspective: Raising a Child with Special Needs
So, when Fatherโs Day comes around this year, and I get the store bought card from one daughter with the beautiful expressions of love for โDaddyโ, and I get the hand-written card from my other daughter that spells out H-A-P-P-Y F-A-T-H-E-R-โS D-A-Y D-A-D-D-Y, L-O-V-E K-A-I-L-E-E, you can bet that inside, deep down, I will be crying tears of joy for very different reasons when I read each one. Three simple words, perhapsโฆ but Shakespeare, himself, could not have written it better.
Proud Dad,
Tom Snellgrove
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