How good is or was your father?
Jay’s father was a high-level manager in a car manufacturing
plant. The father always drove to work on a nice car and wore a necktie
with his neatly-pressed shirt. Years later, the plant was shut down for good. His father was
too old to be hired by any company. So, he was forced to work as a simple mechanic
in his former subordinate’s auto repair shop. One night, Jay saw his once
polished-looking dad come home on a tricycle with grease on shirt and his hands. Jay
realized that his father would do anything and humble himself just to be able
to feed his family.
Romy’s father was a tailor. He did not fulfill his dream of
becoming an engineer and he did not become rich. But this was his firm warning to his children: “Never should I hear about you siblings fighting over money now and
when you all have your own families.”
Rudy was the tenth in his family. All his siblings didn't go to college because they were so poor. When he graduated from high school, his father begged his landowner boss to lend them money for Rudy's education. In return, he would serve the landowner for as long as he lived. So, Rudy went to college and took up mechanical engineering. When the board exam results came out, Rudy was number 8 top-notcher nationwide. His father advised him "out of gratitude for God's goodness, you should never ignore anyone who comes to you for help."
Mon’s father wanted him to become a soldier. But Mon was not
attracted to the idea because his father, a high-ranking officer, never got rich.
But his father wouldn’t sell his influence even though it could change the
family’s fortune. Mon recalls that one night, his father angrily cocked his
rifle to scare away some men who were attempting to bribe him.
George's father worked so hard to support the family. His father fished and even drove a tricycle. The family didn't have a lot of money but he told his children,"Never ever feed your family from dirty money."
My dad, a retired soldier, worked as a top officer in an
anti-smuggling agency. He was the most gentle person on the planet. He had a
.38 caliber snub-nose Smith & Wesson but he always kept it at home. My
brother and I got curious when my dad started tucking the gun on his waist
under his shirt when he went to work. We would learn later on that my dad was
being threatened by someone involved in smuggling and my father didn’t want to
be a part of it.
When Jeff’s son was five years old, the boy asked him to buy
a set of two toy guns. Jeff said that one toy gun was enough because two of
exactly the same thing was impractical. But his son insisted on getting two.
They had a prolonged argument over this until Jeff asked, ”Who would use the
other gun? Your siblings are both girls.” Then his son replied, “The other one
is for you.” At that point, Jeff realized that his son thought of him as a
playmate. This incident changed Jeff’s relationship with his only son.
Good fathers are the best examples for their sons. According
to an article in the Children’s Bureau
website, children who are close to their father are “80% less likely to spend
time in jail.” The website cited the Psychology
Today magazine which said that 85% of youth in jail and 90% of runaway
children had an absent father.
I have read several books on the history of the world. Most
of the evil experienced by mankind were caused by men who were greedy for
wealth and power. They sold their own people as slaves, they slaughtered tribes
in lands they wanted to seize, they massacred their critics, they polluted
rivers, seas and mountains. These wicked
kings and dictators were propped in power by cronies who were corrupted with
wealth and influence.
If all fathers were as good as the examples I mentioned
above, the world can become a much better place.
Some of the most inspiring father and son stories
Reviewed by Robert Labayen
on
5:24 AM
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