The Ultimate Dad

It’s Father’s Day, so I felt like writing.

Imagine that you had the best father in the world.  From as long as you can remember, your father watched over you, protected you, loved you every minute of every day,  and taught you all the ways to be a kind, generous, and loving person.  Your father also gave you ground rules.  Now, he gave you these rules not because he wanted to take the fun out of your life, but to keep you safe and spare you pain.  He warned you not to go out of the yard (and watched you close, just in case), he showed you that even when your brother or sister made you angry, it was better to respond with forgiveness than revenge (even though you beat them up anyway).

Your father gave you every bit of knowledge that you needed to live a good life, not necessarily an easy one, but one with commitment, honor, integrity, and love.  Now, you’re a kid, so you know that kids don’t always listen to their dads.  You think dads are old and boring and they never let you do what you want to do.  Sometimes, you listen to your dad and sometimes you do your own thing, even when you know you shouldn’t.  Sometimes you get lucky (like when you don’t break your neck riding your bicycle straight down a staircase) and sometimes you don’t (like when you throw rocks at cars, one breaks a windshield, and you get caught in the act).

Does Dad stop loving you?  No.  He gets upset that you’ve made a  bad choice and is sad that your bad choice have hurt someone, but you know deep in your heart that he still loves you.  His love is like a safety net and, no matter what, your dad is the best dad in the world.  Some of his rules stink (like not staying out past dark or not letting you eat ice cream for breakfast, lunch, and dinner five days in a row) and some make sense, like forks in the light socket thing.  You know this, because you tried it, and when you got shocked, it scared you and it hurt really really bad.  You wish you’d listened to your dad, but some mistakes you need to make on your own.  Hearing it from your parent just isn’t the same.

And then you got older.

Now you think you know better than Dad.  Dad’s really starting to annoy you because his rules go directly against what you want to do.  He says be nice to your little brother, and you hate your brother and want to hit him whenever you see him because he’s such a pain and Dad doesn’t see half of the things your punk brother does, so it just makes sense you’d make him pay to keep things even.  (Even though Dad doesn’t catch half the things you do either.)  You think that your dad’s ways are old-fashioned and stupid and no one thinks like that anymore.  Why should you do what Dad says when no one else around you does?  Dad’s way sucks.

You listen to your dad less and your friends more because what they’re saying makes sense and, if you’re honest with yourself, their way feels better because it’s fun.  You try to hide things from Dad because you don’t want to deal with the fallout (and the grounding), so you tell him what you think he wants to hear and you do whatever you want anyway.  Every once in a while, Dad nails you – right between the eyes  – and you’re grounded with extra chores, and no TV.  You rail against Dad and his stupid rules and you tell him to get out of your life and leave you alone.

Now you think you know everything there is to know.  You’ve been around, you’ve lived a little.  Oh, you are a smart one now.  Dad’s rules and authority are a distant memory, you’ve even told him so right to his face, and to anyone else who’d listen.  You don’t respect him because he doesn’t “get it” and, frankly, he’s a buzz kill.  In fact, the more he tries to tell you what to do, the more you want to do the opposite, just to make him mad (let’s be honest, because it’s probably fun).  Now you are fighting with Dad all the time.  Dad tells you to be home at eleven, you stay out until two.  Dad tells you that it’s dishonest to cheat on a test, you cheat because you don’t want to do the work, you just want the A.  Dad tells you that it’s mean to disrespect your friends by talking behind their back, but swapping the dirt is fun.  Totally harmless.

You’ve moved out and moved on.

You’ve gotten to a point where Dad’s opinion is the least important opinion in your life.  Things have gotten so bad that when you do see your dad, you tell him how useless he is, and how you want nothing to do with him.  In fact, just thinking about him and his rules makes you angry for no reason at all.  Not only do you not respect him at all, but you don’t even really like him that much.  You don’t call on Father’s Day and you rarely follow anything he’s taught you over the years anymore.  About the only time you do call is when you need money or help moving again, because your landlord was a jerk and evicted you just because you were a little late on rent (a few times).  Dad shows up, helps you out without asking questions,  and you’re off again.  There’s no real conversation because you know he’s disappointed in you and you don’t want to deal with the shame so you take off and resume avoiding him.

And then your choices catch up with you.

One night, you’re out drinking with your buddies, having a good time when things go from “great time” to “in a bad way” really quick.  A big crowd is outside the bar and you are joking around as you wander back to your cars when a fight breaks out.   Maybe your mouth got away from you (again) and you said and did a few things that you shouldn’t have.   Someone pulls a gun on you and before you have time to raise your hand and say, “What?  I didn’t do anything,” it goes off.

From out of nowhere, there’s Dad.  The dad you never listened to, the dad you never respected, the dad you hated for all his rules, the dad you told to stay out of your life.  Dad leaps in front of the gun, takes the bullet, and drops to the ground bleeding.  That bullet meant for you because of what you did.  Those great friends of yours scatter because no one wants to be around for this.  They know this will only end badly and they don’t want to be around when the cops show up.

You drop to your knees and hold Dad in your lap sobbing, blood trickles from his mouth and he’s gasping for air, and you beg him to hold on.  Tears stream unashamedly down your face, stinging your eyes and blurring your vision as you look down at him.  He looks you straight in the eye and though he has every right to say, “This is your fault,” he smiles through the pain and whispers, “I love you.  I’d do it again.”

He closes his eyes and dies.

All those horrible things you did, the way you treated him, the way you threw away his advice and his love despite that it was given with love and wisdom – they all come back to you.  You can’t imagine why he would take a bullet for you, especially after you treated him so badly, yet he did.

And then, the epiphany.

A moment comes in your life when you think, “Maybe my way wasn’t the best idea.  Maybe Dad had it right after all.  I mean, look at me, I’m miserable, I’m lost, and I have never felt so alone.”  So you drive back to Dad’s old house, which has been yours since he passed away, but you’ve never had the heart to visit.  You head up to the attic where Dad kept all the mementos from your life, even the ones you could have sworn you threw away.  You begin to sift through the boxes, and the memories come flooding back as you read the cards, the letters, smile at the trophies and groan at the report cards.  You even find the photo albums and the scrapbooks detailing all of your major and minor achievements, even some of the failures and you see that Dad was so incredibly proud of you.  He wrote in the scrapbook margins next to school projects or sports articles, “my warrior”, “my child”, “my genius”, “my joy”, “the future,” and you can almost imagine the dreams that Dad had for you.

And it hits you .  You understand.  As you read, you see the wisdom, the love, the sacrifice, and you get it.  You GET IT.

You realize that getting your way isn’t always the best idea; in fact, sometimes it’s a really bad one.  You realize that surrounding yourself with people who are only your friend until it’s inconvenient isn’t worth it.  You learn that pain has direction and Dad’s rules were an attempt to spare you from it most of the time.  You realize all of these things and, most of all, you realize that if you’d listened to your dad you wouldn’t have been out drinking to forget how badly that relationship with that person you barely knew went so wrong, and you probably wouldn’t have shot your mouth off to someone unwilling to put up with your crap.

You realize that you deserved that bullet.  Your dad didn’t, but he took it for you anyway, even after all the awful things you’d said and done.  You remember his words, “I love you.  I’d do it again,” and a light goes off in your head.  You fully understand what unconditional love is.

Your dad wanted the best life had to offer for you and you, in your selfish way, frittered it away.  All of the dreams he had for you of achieving something of worth with your time and energy was wasted in bars or in front of the television.  All of the ways he taught you to show kindness so that others could feel the same kind of love were wasted because you never showed it.  You taught a different kind of lessons;  you cut off people in traffic if they cut you off first, you assumed the worst intentions of others because it was what you’d do, and you’d never give unless there was something in it for you.

Right there, sitting in that dusty attic, you make the decision to start fresh.  Your way may have seemed good on the surface, but it wasn’t working, not really.   You decide to give Dad’s way a try and you take that first step in faith, like when you were a kid learning to ride a bike and you believed Dad when he said he’d catch you if the bike tipped (and it did and he did).  You listen for Dad’s voice and you hear it, and your heart is full, and you remember that you have the best Dad in the world.  Dad never said that life would be easy, in fact, Dad said that it would be a lot harder to live his way than your way, but he also said it would be worth it and that one day you would understand.

Dad was right.  So you took another step, listening for his voice to help guide you and there it was telling you when you were on the right path, or the wrong one.  Now, you try to live each day with the kind of love and compassion that Dad had, and some days you succeed and some days you fail, but you always pick yourself up and move on because you know that Dad never expected you to be perfect.  And he loved you, no matter what.  You learn not to expect it from others either and you now give the grace that you received from him (even when you were a pill).

Your heart doesn’t clench in shame when you hear your dad’s voice in your head because you know that you have the best dad in the world.  He’s your conscience and your cheering squad, your example and your guide, your rock and your lifeboat.  He is the one that loved you when you were unlovable and he took a bullet meant for you even when you hated him.  You remind yourself of his words when the pain of life is too much.

“I love you.  I’d do it again.”

Each night before you go to sleep, you note the way that your life has changed, you thank your dad for showing you the way, and you thank him for taking that bullet and giving you a second chance.  You wish that every friend, relative, co-worker, or stranger on the street had your dad.  Because your dad is best father in the world.

Melissa Bianco

I’m a Walker!

February 21, 2010

Oh yes, I said it.  I’m walking in the Susan G. Komen 3-Day for a Cure event in San Francisco on October 1 – 3, 2010.
60 miles in 3 days!!!!

I’m totally insane, but this is worth the work.  I was looking for a cause and I kept seeing the commercials as I was walking each morning on the treadmill at the gym.
And it just clicked.  So I attended the Getting Started meeting, signed up, and now I’m registered.

This is my chance to do my part in the fight to cure breast cancer!!

How exciting, scary, fun, intimidating, exhilarating, and (insert adjective)!

If you’d like to support me, click below to donate:

Help me reach my goal for the Susan G. Komen San Francisco Bay Area 3-Day for the Cure!

The Foot Wants What the Foot Wants

This was just sent to me , so I’m passing it on.  This little “exercise” comes (apparently) from an orthopedic surgeon.    The claim was that it would “boggle my mind” and it will keep me trying over and over to see if I can outsmart my foot, but apparently I can’t.  It’s pre-programmed in my brain.

So with a hefty dose of skepticism and making sure no one was watching (apparently this only takes 2 seconds to try), I gave it a whirl.  And, dagnammit, if it ain’t so!  Okay, so now it’s your turn.

How Smart Is Your Right Foot?

  1. Without anyone watching you (they will think that you are goofy), and while sitting at your desk in front of your computer, lift your right foot off of the floor and make clockwise circles.
  2. Now, while doing this (don’t stop), draw the number “6” in the air with your right hand.

Your foot will change direction.

Well?  Did it happen to you, too?

A Lesson About Books and Covers

No introduction needed.  Just watch.  I can’t embed the YouTube video, so you’ll need to visit their website to view this.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxPZh4AnWyk

 

Strange Advance – Triple Threat

One of the best new wave bands to come out of Canada in the 1980s.  These videos (one is simply a slideshow) definitely bring me back and those boys sure knew how to do an instrumental opening.  Enjoy the great music that has held up over the years and cringe equally at the videos that did not.

Worlds Away

We Run

Love Becomes Electric

(Poor quality, unfortunately.)

The New Regime

Or regimen.  I can’t remember which applies better here. 

So at lunch today, I went to 24-Hour Fitness for a little abuse, I mean, Kickboxing.  This was pretty interesting because it was humbling in the extreme.  I kickboxed back in Canada about, oh, ten years ago and I can safely say:

How far have I fallen?

Oh.  Pretty far.  I still had the ability to keep my block up, but everything else was very reminiscent of my first kickboxing class and wanting to pretty much die every minute of it.  Here’s a tip:  don’t constantly check the clock.  Time really does not go any faster.  I did learn a little something, though, at today’s class vs. a decade ago:

  • I’m older
  • I’m out of shape
  • I shouldn’t try to keep up with the 110 pound girl who bounces between kicks
  • It will eventually get better

But aside from that, I managed to not pass out, not throw up, and not walk out.  (Ask me how I do next Monday!)  I keep forgetting how hard this exercise thing is when you don’t do it in a long time, put on a ton of weight, and generally lose all sense of flexibility, style, and strength. 

But enough whining!  (No really, I could go on all day.)  I made it through and I’m proud of myself for that.  I have a more fun “dance” class on Wednesday which I am hoping will perk me up a little to this exercise thing.  We’ll see.

Still, it was pretty funny wandering out (hobbling, more like) of the class and having my work friend, Theresa, complaining as loudly as I was.  That made me feel better.

I’m very curious to see how my posts will change in, say, two months time when I’ve been exercising (hopefully regularly) for a little while.  If all things work as I think they will, it’ll just get easier.  With easier comes more fun.  God, please, let it be more fun.

Peace.

~Melissa

P.S.  I totally feel like having some ice cream right now, but I’m too tired and lazy to drive all the way down to Longs Drugs to get some.

Church In a Do-It-Yourself World

So I attended church this morning.  My family and I got up, we picked up my step-daughter’s friend, and drove to church. 

Religious Backlash

The Christian church has taken a few beatings lately, especially with the new Obama administration.  Abortion, embryonic stem cell research, Prop 8 – all of these things, biblically speaking, the church is against.   I’ve heard people describe church, Jesus, God, and church-goers as:

  • bigoted
  • hypocritical
  • narrow-minded
  • archaic
  • judgmental
  • useless
  • irrelevant
  • dangerous
  • bloated
  • money-grubbing (high-profile church leaders – usually associated with Jim Bakker, Oral Roberts, et al)
  • dominating
  • opinionated

The list goes on.  The church is too opinionated.  Why does the church get to tell me what to do.  Why is God even in the equation when it comes to affairs of the State.   The bible isn’t real anyway, and even if it were, look at all the brutality of the Old Testament – you call that a loving God??

I didn’t grow up a Christian.  I grew up in an alcoholic family of divorce.  I didn’t focus on God, I focused on being invisible and making sure everyone around me thought that my life was “just fine”.  I had no one to really rely on and I managed to eek out a pretty good existence with some issues here and there.  

From the outside looking in, God and the church and all those “believers” is incredibly daunting, as if they know something you don’t know.  They have “all the answers” and it’s irritating when they try to tell you what you’re doing wrong.  So it’s easy to be offended by that, as if they know what’s right for you.

I went to church today.  And this is what I got from a big group of “narrow-minded, antiquated, judgmental” people who believe in “something that probably doesn’t exist anyway”.

My pastor spoke about past hurts and how with Jesus’ sacrifice all those mistakes we’ve made, they’re gone.  Guilt?  That’s gone, too, because when you’re forgiven it’s not just for twenty minutes, it’s for life.  Judgment?    If you’re a believer, that’s not God whispering in your ear telling you didn’t earn it or deserve it, well, that comes from a whole different and much darker place. 

How can I possibly explain to someone who has never “let go” of their life and given it over to the Creator of the universe that trust is not a four-letter word?  How do I explain the kind of heart-shattering love that comes with knowing there is ONE person out there who loves you more than even you can imagine and has only the best plans for your life?  How can you put that into words to someone who thinks I’m weak because I believe in something that isn’t fully understandable, but is absolutely knowable? 

We did Communion today as a remembrance of the sacrifice that Jesus made for us and although it’s a little disconcerting to think about the trauma that Jesus went through for us (if you’ve seen The Passion of the Christ you have a very good idea of what it was probably like) so that we could be free of these very real, though intangible, chains that bind us and crush us and strangle us. 

I looked around as the choir sang Amazing Grace and I saw the Prayer Team, just regular people who love God and want to use their gift to help others, praying with people they didn’t even know in one big group until every single one of them had been prayed for.  I don’t know what the issues were, anything and everything.  Just because we believe in God doesn’t mean we’re not human, with the infinite capacity for making mistakes – even really big ones. 

Through my pastor, I heard what God thinks about my finances, how I should be a good steward of my money and becoming a slave to another lender.  Hear that, those of us who are in debt to credit card lenders?   I learned about how everything in life is cyclical and when pastor asked us who had ever  been in rough financial times to raise our hands, nearly 90% of the entire congregation did.  Know what that means?  It means we have been there.  It means there is no shame in needing help and it means that for those people who thought they were alone, well, they were wrong. 

Then pastor directed people to information about programs the church offered from Finance Seminars to Celebrate Recovery (like biblical 12-Step), to Hannah’s Hope Chest (free shopping if you can’t afford clothes, food, etc.), to Premarital Counseling and Marriage Seminars.  Do you know how much all of this costs to the people taking part in these church-sponsored activities?  Usually – nothing.  Maybe the cost of a workbook. 

You know who pays for all of that?  The people of the church who give their time, talent, and money to the church so that God can use it in a way that will be a blessing and aid to others.  Many people don’t agree with the church or what God says about many topics today.  In fact, when it comes to many issues, a lot of people don’t want to hear what God has to say.

Unbelievers – Before

  • God shouldn’t tell me what to do with my body
  • Sleeping around is my business, not anybody else’s
  • I get high,  so what?  It’s not hurting anyone
  • I don’t know what the big deal is, I lost my virginity when I was 12
  • The only person I gotta worry about is me
  • We need tolerance, but I can’t take what those Christians are preachin’, they shouldn’t be so narrow-minded
  • There is no God
  • What I achieve and what I have shows everybody how important I am
  • Religion is for suckers and weak people who can’t handle life

Unbelievers – After

  • I wish I hadn’t done it, I never knew it would be this hard – I still think about it
  • I’m pregnant / I thought he loved me, but he left me / I have a commnunicable disease / I feel used / It wasn’t worth it
  • I got busted / I got in an accident / I owe money to this guy… / I don’t feel like… / Whatever, who cares?
  • I wish I had waited / He was such a jerk, he told everyone / I didn’t love him / He pressured me / It wasn’t worth it
  • I wish I had someone to talk to / I’m lonely / Why don’t people like me? / Would anyone even care if I wasn’t here?
  • People should be able to believe whatever they want – except the Nazis, and the Christians, and those Jihad Muslims, and…
  • There is nothing but me.  Nothing.  But me. 
  • I’m exhausted / What if I fail? / What’s the next big thing? / Are they impressed? / Oh no, I failed, I’m losing it all.  I’m nobody.
  • I wish I had someone to share this burden with / Why doesn’t anyone even care? / How do I handle this on my own?

Believers – Before

  • I’m afraid, I don’t know what to do
  • I messed up – big time
  • I feel alone
  • I need wisdom and guidance
  • I’m hurting right now
  • I’m lost
  • What is my purpose?
  • How can I make a difference?
  • How do I share my gifts?
  • How can I turn my awful past into something that will help others?
  • What does God expect from me?

Believers – After

  • I prayed and even though I didn’t get the answer right away, you wouldn’t believe how God communicated to me…
  • I went to church and Pastor said that God has already forgiven us, we need to let it go and accept it.  I feel like a huge weight has been lifted from me.
  • I joined a ministry, so now I help in the kitchen and I met some really great people / I joined a singles group and met my husband / I attended a seminar and met some…
  • I looked up a great passage in the Bible and it was so weird how it answered my question perfectly, I just needed the moral reminder to make the hard decision
  • I got a call from the girl in my Small Group and she said she saw me looking out of sorts so she felt compelled to call me, it was weird, but the timing of her call was so perfect
  • I felt really far away from God, I was doing some stuff I knew I shouldn’t be, maybe hiding from God, but I went to service and sat in the back and prayed and now I felt better – it was so dumb to try and hide from God, He knows what I’m up to, but just talking to Him and getting it out like that made me feel so much better
  • I never thought I could feel so alive and useful delivery home-cooked meals to someone who is bed-ridden, but the way she lights up every time I come over, if I were in her shoes, I’d want the same thing.  I feel like I make a difference and even though I’m exhausted, inside my heart I feel so energized!
  • I didn’t think it was a big deal donating that crib, but when I heard the story about the family who lost their home during the hurricane, it really showed me that even the small things make a difference
  • I joined a Ministry at church and now I greet people at every service and it is so wonderful to see how they go from nervous and confused about what to do, to smiling back and thanking me for showing them around.  I may have just led someone to their seat who could become a believer today.
  • I never in a million years would believe I’m telling the story of my life to an auditorium of over 5,000 people.  So many came up to me after the talk and said how they were experiencing exactly what I had. 
  • I always skated by on life before, I was never really very moral before and it really burned me, but now, I hold myself to a higher standard – Jesus’ standard – and even though I can’t be perfect all the time like He was, I know that when I am honest and trustworthy and sincere, that people see I’m someone who is decent inside and out.  I am someone that they can rely on and someone that they look up to. 

So I went to church today.  I saw people joyful loving and praising all the great things God has done for them.  I saw people in earnest prayer seeking God’s guidance and forgiveness for mistakes they’d made, mistakes they wanted to turn away from.  I saw people give and receive love from perfect strangers.  I saw tears of joy, heartache, relief, and sorrow.  I saw a community of people who collectively believe that they are not all they will ever have, that there is something/someone far bigger and more capable of handling the problems of their lives – and more than willing to do so, if they will let Him.

I saw a community of people who trust in God, as crazy and strange as it sounds, and I have seen miracles and wonders that He’s performed even in my life.   His way is not easy, it requires sacrifice, changes, moral inventory, walking away from things that – even though they feel “good” at the time – eventually sink their hooks and suck the life right out of us.  It’s a scary thing walking away from being free of moral responsiblity, believing in God, believing in Jesus and that He existed, and that the bible is true.  

But ultimately we have two choices:

  • live up to God’s word and standard and create a life of purpose and have guidance along the days of our lives
  • live down to the world’s standard, where everything is about you, you’re the only one that matters, and you are your own god

I went to church today and I learned just another wonderful lesson about life.  And my family did, too.

~Melissa