In the United States and some other countries, today is Father's Day. In our family, June 15th is also Son Donald's birthday.
Donald usually comes over to our condo for a birthday dinner. Because of my Covid quarantine (which ends tomorrow!) I checked with him to see if pushing off his celebration until next weekend worked for him.
It did. That left today without much on the calendar. For years Hubby Tony has been gracious enough to combine celebrations together, but today it got to be all about him.
The first event was breakfast. In
order to beat the heat, right after rolling out of bed we walked to the Sunny Street Cafe for a great meal Later in the day we drove to the movie theater to see The Phoenician Scheme. Tony watched the baseball game on television. For dinner I made pork chops, sweet potato fries, corn on the cob, and applesauce. For dessert, Tony contributed his birthday pastry from Panera.
We also celebrated the young fathers in the family. This morning we forwarded some words of wisdom I found on Facebook- a post titled
Ten Things To Remember On Father’s Day (For Dads Everywhere) from
The Paps Fam. Their words touched me, and I decided to also share them with you.
1. You matter more than you know.
Your presence, your voice, your steady hand-these shape
lives.
2. Little eyes are always watching.
Even your smallest acts teach the biggest lessons.
3. You don’t have to be perfect.
Just present. Just real. That’s what they’ll remember.
4. Love doesn’t always look loud.
It’s in early mornings, late nights, quiet
sacrifice.
5. Your words carry weight.
Speak life, speak hope-they’ll echo for years.
6. Showing up is a superpower.
Even when you’re tired, your presence speaks volumes.
7. It’s okay to be soft.
Strength is found in kindness, in hugs, in “I love you”.
8. You are building legacy.
With every bedtime story, every scraped-knee pep talk, every
prayer.
9. They’ll remember how you made them feel.
Safe. Loved. Seen. That’s what lasts.
10. You’re not alone.
There’s no manual for fatherhood-but there is grace for
the journey.
Five years ago today:
Describes Me To A T