My Daddy's Hands
My Daddy's hands were always larger and stronger than most men,
probably because of the type of construction work he performed as a
cement finisher, block mason and carpenter. Even as my own hands
grew from little girl's hands to a woman's hands, I never felt
more safe than when he wrapped his arms around me and squeezed my
ribs with those big hands even though sometimes so tight, I couldn't
breathe from his Irishman's hugs! Of course, he was a "bigger
than life" figure to me from his height to his longer-than-most
arms with those huge hands attached! We used to tease Daddy about
"scraping his knuckles on the ground" as he walked. He would
smile that big grin and laugh like he had just been told the funniest
joke he'd ever heard! "Yes, I know" he'd say, "I have to
buy my shirts specially made!" When I was little, I remember him
coming home from work, his clothes dirty and sweaty, as well as a
little dusty from mixing the block mortar, but I didn't care ... my
Daddy was home and that meant I could sit on his lap and rest my head
on his chest while he hugged me with those big hands and tell me how
much he missed his little "Sparky" (a nickname he gave me he said
later because my eyes always sparkled when I looked at him!).
Those huge hands ... I remember always
seeing one of them on the steering wheel and the other on the old
"suicide" knobs while he was driving the old pickup truck. I
loved the fact that he could turn the steering wheel just holding
onto that one knob - I was fascinated by it! There were also those
few mornings that I'd wake up early (rarely) and catch him getting
dressed for work. I loved watching those hands string up his work
boots with such a steady rhythm, it was almost melodic and
mezmerizing. Or watching those hands holding the shaving brush whip
up the soap into a lather in the palm of one hand and without any
hesitation spread the white cloud-like peaks across his face, soon
followed by the scraping sound of his whiskers giving into the bladed
razor. There was something so peaceful about watching Daddy shave ...
no talking, just listening to the sounds and watching his face become
contorted to dodge the edge of the blade ... first one side, then the
other. Then he'd tell me "There, smooth as a baby's butt!"
Then I'd laugh out loud at hearing him say the word "butt"!
As I got a little older, Daddy would take me to the jobsites to
take payroll or check on progress of his men on a project. I loved
those times because it was a joy we shared - I knew he loved his
work and he took pride in what he did. He always told me, "If
something is worth doing, it's worth doing the best you can."
Sometimes, while visiting a jobsite, he'd pick up a mason's
trowel to show one of the trainee's how it's done. He'd grip
the handle of that trowel and I'd swear his hand would reach around
it twice! Then he'd grab a block with the other hand and hold it
up while he "buttered" each block end, then place it in a bed of
mortar from the course below. Yes, he had "working man's"
hands - blistered and cracked, knicked and splintered but strong as
Oak. One day while I was visiting the jobsite with Dad, he got so
flustered that the block work wasn't going as fast as it should.
One of the young apprentices who had gotten his fill of Dad's
chiding about working so slow, made the mistake of saying "Well,
old man if you think you can do it faster, get on the other end of
the line and show us!" Well, that did it. First, you don't call
him an "old man" and second, don't challenge him to a
block-laying contest! Big mistake. Dad got on the other end of an
approximate 200-lineal foot long wall about 3 courses off the slab,
and he told the Foreman to yell "Go" when he and this young
apprentice were ready. Afterwards, two things were clear: One, the
apprentice never referred to my Dad as "old" again and he also
never challenged him to lay blocks again! The "standard" for
laying blocks was set that day.
One Saturday morning, I woke up to hear Mom and Dad talking in the
next room about Dad playing "King of the Mountain" at the
neighborhood "juke joint" and standing on the tailgate of his
pickup truck asking for "anyone who was man enough who could knock
him off it". I don't know what idiot would want to find one of
those huge fists upside their heads but there were a few brave souls
that took his "goating" and lost. Dad said someone called the
Police and when he jumped down off the tailgate, some Coward hit him
over the head with a beer bottle and he had to have stitches. Later,
he was not keen on getting the stitches taken out and every time he
combed his hair for the longest time, he would catch the comb on
those stitches until they were gone. If the truth be told, he was a
real "baby" when it came to going to the doctor!
One memory I have of my Daddy's hands was when I'd done
something wrong or sassed back (rarely to be sure) and he took off
his belt and would just sit in front of me with those huge hands
making that belt "snap" followed by a warning never to do that
again! The few times he did spank me, my Mother said it just tore him
up and she would be the one that would have to spank me! I think
Daddy worried about his strength and couldn't stand to see his
girls cry for any reason.
For a working man, you'd think my Daddy would drink his coffee
in a big coffee mug. Only a few people knew it but he loved his
coffee in a China cup with saucer! Too funny to watch this because
his "pinky" finger had been broken long ago and it would stand
straight out as he gripped that China cup, almost like he was
intending it to do, but such was far from the truth. He just
couldn't bend that little finger! We'd sometimes tease him that
he looked like a "sissy" but Heaven help anyone else who dared
say that to him!
Another memory was to watch my Dad when he'd ask my Mom to slow
dance, which was really the only dancing he liked. He'd extend his
huge, calloused hand to her and she'd place her small, gentle hand
in his. He'd then hold her hand close to his chest while he held
her back with the other hand and gently touch his face up against
hers, then he softly guided her around the dance floor.
Later, I remember his hands holding my newborn baby boy for the
first time. Though my son, Matt, was a larger those most babies, his
body seemed so tiny in the grip of those huge, gentle hands. Funny
thing, when Matt was being born, the doctor exclaimed out loud, "Look
at the hands on this kid!" Yes, he had inherited his grandfather's
hands it seems!
A few years later, as my Dad laying dying, I was sitting by his
hospital bedside holding his hand, reassuring him his family would be
fine and he could go. As I looked as these hands that had worked so
hard to give me such a wonderful life, I thought about the memories
and what those hands had endured in his lifetime. Those hands
reflected his life and I thought about how they had impacted my own
life. From holding me in his arms - both as a little girl and as a
woman, to wiping away my tears, holding my Mother while they danced,
working-class hands, disciplinary hands, shaving hands, fighting
hands, loving hands, gentle hands holding his grandson, worried
hands, angry hands ... our hands reflect our lives and tell the
story. Then as I saw Daddy for the last time at the funeral and I
bent over to kiss his forehead once more, my eyes then went to his
hands crossed gently one over the other. Funny, those once huge
hands no longer looked so ominous, but looked somehow soft and
peaceful. Then I realized, his work here was done and those hands
could finally rest.
8-23-2013
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