When I was little I played with dolls. I imagined being a wife and a mom one day – it was a dream I had. That, and becoming a writer. I never, ever thought about being a dad. What little girl does?
At 28, my dream came true.
It happened again at 30, and for the third time when I was 34. Life was perfect. I was a writer, a mom, and a wife, and my kids had the best dad in
the world.
I know everyone says that – that their husband or dad is the
best dad in the world. I loved it when
my kids would say I was the best mom in the world. They said it like it was the truth. They made me believe it was true because I
was the best to them. That’s all that counts. And as far as Matthew, Meaghan, Julia and I
are concerned, their dad was the best dad in the world.
For 13 years of motherhood, life was perfect. We had happy kids and a happy life. I was living the dream that I had when I was
little. But luck shifted toward the end of year 13, and life interjected something I hadn’t planned for or ever dreamed of. When I was four days shy of turning 41, I became a dad, sort of. By default. By force.
By necessity.
I’ve written about this before – about how my kids so
endearingly acknowledge on Father’s Day my attempts at being to them what their
dad was, and about how I’m the first to admit I will never be able to fill
those size 9.5 EEE shoes. Jeff was funny
and goofy, and he had high expectations for them. He was devoted, and in love with his
family. He saw his role as a dad as the
greatest gift God ever gave him. He was
the best, bar none, to us.
My heart breaks for my kids when I see other dads with their
adult children, and I wonder what our kids and Jeff would be like together at
this stage. I picture them having their
first (legal) beer together, him congratulating them on landing their first
jobs, celebrating their first real paycheck.
I silently wish he had been here to show Matthew how to shave; to see them
graduate; to help them through their first heartbreaks. I say to myself as I watch these young adults interact with their #1 dads –
“appreciate him, respect him, and love him.
You don’t know how lucky you are.”
Not just on Father’s Day, but every day.