My dad died, at the age of 60, after doing everything in life the right way. |
Everything is now up for my questioning. He taught me everything that I believe because he did everything right. I take the vitamins, I take a jog. I take a long drive and contemplate the old wooden wagons and lives that drove over the flint hills, stuck in the mud or stricken with some foreign fever. I read my bible. I read biographies of great people and their real life secrets of scandal to success. I settled down, got married, had a kid. I go to work, drink coffee, mail the mortgage. I do everything as closely to his direction, like a finger following the blue highway on a map, in order to stay on the streets he recommended. I don't only follow his footprints, I put my own foot down inside his footprints, I stare down at my smaller shoe, with room to grow into his greater, wider, longer example of life. I laugh, I cry, make jokes. I write, I pray, I donate time and sometimes my clothes. I do everything he told me to do. And he still died. Too young to see my child start school. Too young to read my words. Too young to see me follow his life in the way that he wanted. I was doing everything just to make him proud. Now everything seems wrong since he isn't here to see it. And everything I did, I'm not sure if I should do anymore. |