Saturday, April 22, 2017

Lessons Learned

I'm reading a book right now and this morning it hit me. The father in the book reminds me of my Dad.

In the book a young girl has gone blind and her father finds a way to show her the world. My father did exactly the same thing.



Sometimes, it was drawing a one yard square in the dirt while we were working and I was too small to constantly have something to do, and telling me to watch it until he returned. Then he would quiz me. What did I see? What did I learn?

Other times it was taking my sister and me on a hike in the woods and then announcing, “I'll see you back at camp.” This started happening when I was very small. My sister and I learned to pay attention. Dad would say things like,“Look at the way that tree is growing, do you think the one with the fork above it caused it to be stunted like that?”

Lessons like: A flowing stream will eventually lead to a river and towns are built on rivers. Water with bugs is safe. I knew a lot about edible plants in the wild and where the dry tinder (on the underside of conifers) could be found in a pinch.

The Colorado Rockies held no fear for me. I camped alone there from the time I could drive. The Utah desert was the same. All the ways to find moisture, how to spot flash flood danger, where to watch for rattlesnakes.

In the novel, the father makes a model of the town for the newly blind girl, prewar France in August 1944. A year later, they step out of his work, a journey they've made with her hand on his belt loop, every work day, and he says, “take us home.”

I marvel at my Dad, telling us, see you back at camp and stepping off the trail. He was gone. We couldn't see him, couldn't hear him. I remember being very afraid. I was 6 years old. But my sister was just over 4 years old and already crying. I said, “Don't worry, we can do it.'

I knew he would not ask of me more than I could do. He trusted me because he knew my capabilities. He believed in me and taught me to believe in me.