View Full Version : Of memories to come
Srbo
January 10th, 2013, 08:40 AM
I like to write about people. Anybody, anything. Little things mostly, the ones you remember for no particular reason. How somebody smiled, how their face looked like in a given moment, a gesture soon to be forgotten..maybe not even noticed at all. Especially about my family, but the sad thing is I spent only a little time with them in my life...the war, moving to Canada and so on...so sometimes I`m running low on memories, until they come back to me, usually in a dream.
I often wonder if my daughter is going to read all that, once she grows up..and if she is going to like to write. Would she write about me? What would she say about daddy? Good man, bad man, fantastic dad or an ass*ole, somebody to look up to or maybe never think about him at all, saint or sinner?
Dang...it`s gonna be a long wait for that. Maybe she`s gonna scribble something down as an assignment in school, but the real stuff? That comes later. If it comes at all. I don`t wanna read what she would write while in puberty. Is there anybody who said or wrote anything positive about his/her parents during that time? I doubt it. ;-)
I just hope she`s gonna write at all.
That`s one wish I have in life...to be remembered by her. In a good way, I hope.
Please God help me to be a good dad...I`ll pay you back when I see you...if I see you at all.
Do you ever think about stuff like that, my friends?
Srbo
January 10th, 2013, 02:15 PM
No?
Well then...:)
Moderator
January 10th, 2013, 02:28 PM
Not sure if this is what you're thinking of, Srbo, but there are things I've written that I want to make sure are destroyed before my kids or anyone else reads them after I'm gone. They were very private moments of my life that I felt the need to write about but with the intention they were only for me. :dunno: I've often wondered if some of our historical figures would be okay with having their love letters, diaries, and other private moments shared with the general public.
Neesy
January 10th, 2013, 02:29 PM
I don't actually write... Either a journal or short stories or a diary. I should start writing things down. I think about whether my son who is getting married very soon will end up having children. I worry about my younger son who has a learning problem and what his future holds. I would say that your daughter is going to appreciate you (but not until after puberty!) of course. I wish you good times ahead with your daughter (family outings, milestones like her graduation and who knows - eventually getting married?) etc. You sound like a good Dad already so I hope she does appreciate her dear old Dad and love him as much as possible! :blush:
Vose
January 10th, 2013, 02:42 PM
Just out of curiousity, what form of payment do you think God might accept when you reach the clearing? :)
I think about stuff like this all of the time. Conjecture like this often makes me a bit crazy, though, since so much of it is out of my hands. Will my son be a good man? Will he listen to the lessons I try to teach him? Will he like me? Will he choose his friends wisely? I have to say that I actually did write lots of positive things about my parents (poetry, journal entries, etc) when I was an adolescent/teenager. The problem was my actual interactions - I loved and respected them but just didn't tell/show them at that point. My guess, Srbo, is that if you're thinking about all of this as clearly as you are then you're probably doing the right thing, at least for the most part!
LongTallSally
January 10th, 2013, 02:54 PM
I write a lot, but I do it in a blog where few people know how to find it. Someone who plays an important role in my life is a regular reader, so someone out there knows I exist and I thank him for his influence pretty regularly. When I am gone, I'll fade from some people's memories, but there will be a written record of what my life is from day to day left behind. I don't advertise my blog because it's mainly where I sort the crap from the day and keep track of important events for later reference.
Autumn Gust
January 10th, 2013, 03:04 PM
Srbo, you asked, "Do you ever think about stuff like that my friends?"
The answer is ALWAYS. As a parent, it never ends-- even when your children are grown, you continue to worry about their safety, ponder some of the choices they make, question whether you could have done a better job raising them, wonder what the actual influence you had on their lives, etc... It's clear by your post that you are a good, intelligent, and thoughtful father. Don't think too far ahead, though-- it's too overwhelming! A philosophy of "One Day at a Time", along with a sense of humor is what keeps me afloat in the parenting game!
mstay
January 10th, 2013, 11:04 PM
Srbo, you asked, "Do you ever think about stuff like that my friends?"
The answer is ALWAYS. As a parent, it never ends-- even when your children are grown, you continue to worry about their safety, ponder some of the choices they make, question whether you could have done a better job raising them, wonder what the actual influence you had on their lives, etc... It's clear by your post that you are a good, intelligent, and thoughtful father. Don't think too far ahead, though-- it's too overwhelming! A philosophy of "One Day at a Time", along with a sense of humor is what keeps me afloat in the parenting game!
This is exactly what I would say too Srbo. I worry every day about what kind of parent I was/am and whether I taught them everything they need to know. (I didn't of course.) I hope they remember the good things better than they remember the bad times. But it's past now and I did what I did.
I think the fact that you are thinking about it means you are doing a better job than a lot of people.
Lily Sawyer
January 10th, 2013, 11:15 PM
I like to write about people. Anybody, anything. Little things mostly, the ones you remember for no particular reason. How somebody smiled, how their face looked like in a given moment, a gesture soon to be forgotten..maybe not even noticed at all. Especially about my family, but the sad thing is I spent only a little time with them in my life...the war, moving to Canada and so on...so sometimes I`m running low on memories, until they come back to me, usually in a dream.
I often wonder if my daughter is going to read all that, once she grows up..and if she is going to like to write. Would she write about me? What would she say about daddy? Good man, bad man, fantastic dad or an ass*ole, somebody to look up to or maybe never think about him at all, saint or sinner?
Dang...it`s gonna be a long wait for that. Maybe she`s gonna scribble something down as an assignment in school, but the real stuff? That comes later. If it comes at all. I don`t wanna read what she would write while in puberty. Is there anybody who said or wrote anything positive about his/her parents during that time? I doubt it. ;-)
I just hope she`s gonna write at all.
Do you ever think about stuff like that, my friends?
Drugaru, when she's a teenager, you'll become Dad the Dork. Guaranteed. (I know; I was once a teenaged girl. And even though I loved my father and still do, he was a d-o-r-k and embarrassed me to no end, especially if he answered the door wearing house slippers.) (Don't ask. I was a teenager. There IS no logic to teenage angst and sources of embarrassment.)
And then you won't be Dad the Dork, when she's college-aged. She'll grow out of it and become Sweet Suzana all over again. But just be prepared to be a seemingly inexhaustable supply of idiocy to her for a stretch of time....and for her to mature out of it as well.
She'll write about it. Don't worry. Most of us do some kind of writing about our families at some point or another.
And yes.....you're a good dad. You don't hear her complaining, do you?? :love:
GNTLGNT
January 11th, 2013, 06:10 AM
...the clarity of your soul should shine through to her old friend, never doubt that...some of the heaviest, yet most succinct writing I've ever done, is contained in a text on my cell phone under my "ICE"(In Case of Emergency)slug...it's there for my family, if I should reach the clearing while away...
Jojo87
January 11th, 2013, 09:24 AM
I've wrote a diary about my special moments in my life, which I started about 13 years ago. But I don't think I will ever show it to my
kids if I ever get any kids. It's just my diary and I will only read it for myself and keep those memories for myself.
fushingfeef
January 11th, 2013, 10:06 AM
Having been to too many funerals of family members, I often think about what people would say at my funeral. Maybe I have a big ego but I can't imagine that I haven't somehow changed the lives of the people I know in at least some little way, or maybe even some big ways (in the case of close friends and immediate family). I feel connected to people and that is important to me. What will they say about me? Hopefully my kids will say I was a good father, provider, confidante, and friend. Luckily every day I get to another chance to try my best at each of those things.
doowopgirl
January 11th, 2013, 11:12 AM
I always think about how what I do now will affect my son inj the future. Are we good parents. We do try to think about how this or that will affect him, but you know, sometimes you can think too much. I think sometimes you just need to get on with it and trust your instincts. Things like Christmas traditions we want to be happy memories, but sometimes you just do and don't really think. Does that make any sense?
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