For those of you still following
along, I thank you. There are so many days I’ve forgotten to be grateful.
As I keep chugging away at writing (10,000 words not ready for public consumption), I find myself apologizing. I apologize to my father, to
myself, to something or someone unknown, and to you, kind readers, for the plethora
of typos Brian keeps finding- EVERYWHERE. Apparently, I suck at proof-reading.
I’m sorry that Daddy never saw me grow
up. Parents aren’t any more happy than non-parents in the grand scheme. The
difference is in moments of sublime joy which only happen when your child
astounds you. When our children discover the world, we have a chance to re-discover
the wonder of seeing something, even something ordinary, for the first time. This lasts for a brief moment until the next adventure (read as tantrum), but its brevity takes nothing away from its magic.
The thought that he missed out on so
many of those moments makes me really sad for him. For that, I am monumentally sorry.
My mother told me that my father
was in the play, Our House by: Thornton Wilder. It’s an amazing work, both
for it’s modern simplicity and for the sheer philosophical depths delivered in a
regular small town – Grover’s Corners. I think because I knew that (and because
Kirk Cameron played the lead in Growing Pains), I was aware of it and
dove into it more deeply when I’ve seen it staged and read it in English Class.
Consider
the question:
“Emily: Do any human beings ever
realize life while they live it?--every, every minute?
Stage Manager: No. The saints and
poets, maybe--they do some.”
Based on some of the things I remember
my father saying, I believe he was like that.
When I was an undergrad, I took a Hegel
seminar spring of sophomore year. My father and I both went to Holy Cross (not the junior college across the street from Notre Dame in case you're thinking of Rudy).
Sometimes I wonder if my undergraduate education was really a search for connection with his
life and experience. Other days, I am quite sure it wasn't.
I thought a lot of Phenomenology of The Spirit could be summed up in this play. Yet, I digress down a path
only Philosophy majors dare to tread (the divine living through a continuous
cycle of creating and becoming…I can feel normal people’s eyes rolling into the
backs of their heads). For the final paper, I researched Thornton Wilder’s
journals and biographies. Sure enough, Wilder read and commented on Hegel.
There was I, a silly undergrad, making a connection that made the others in my
seminar laugh at me (pretension is sometimes a by-product of studying philosophy),
but that was a new idea for many. I came up with a new way to think about two
seemingly different things. This is
something his legacy gave me – the chance to think and see what others may not.
I’ll spare you the rant on why liberal arts are relevant in today’s world – if you
don't see it, I can’t make you.
Phew, enough for today.
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