Father’s Day 2011: Lessons my dad taught me after his passing

(This was originally published as a Facebook note in 2011. I am re-posting in recognition of the 20th anniversary of my dad's passing.)

It occurs to me that I haven’t acknowledged Father’s Day since my dad passed away 14 years ago.  Actually, I probably didn’t really pay much attention to it before then either since I don’t really think my dad cared that much about it.

You see, my dad wasn’t really home much when I was growing up.  It wasn’t his fault.  He had another family.  A few months after my dad died, I was having a really bad day, emotionally, and I ran into a woman whom I didn’t know but who clearly knew me.  Of course.  I was Mr. Guyot’s Daughter.   Anyway, this woman could tell I was having a difficult time keeping things together so she grabbed my hands in hers and said, “I know how you feel.  He was my dad too.” 

So there it was.  She had said it.  If I hadn’t been crying so hard I would have punched her in the face.  But she was telling the truth.  It was no secret.  My mom knew.  The whole town knew.  My sister and I knew.  My dad had several other families.  Every year a new crop of high school Seniors arrived to take my dad’s Senior English class.  And every year he recruited students for the three extra-curriculars that he coached.  Cross-country, Speech and Drama Team, and Track.  My dad was a small-town celebrity.  My dad was one of the best high school teachers that ever lived.  My dad was a legend. 

It’s hard being the daughter of a legend.  You get called Mr. Guyot’s Daughter a lot and it starts to get really old.  In college I started saying things like, “I do have my own identity you know.”   You have to share a legend with a lot of other people who need him.  You start saying things like, “He may be a great teacher/coach but he’s not a great dad.”  I actually said these things to people!

I stopped acknowledging Father’s Day because it was too painful.  I thought that not only had my dad been taken away from me for the rest of my adult years but I had clearly been robbed of him as a child as well.  To be honest…I was really angry.  I thought that he had spent all of his time teaching lessons to other people’s kids instead of being a father to me.  What I can see now is that teaching all those other people’s kids actually made him a great dad.

My dad took a teaching job that was supposed to last a semester, just until his writing career took off.  Little did he know that teaching was not a job for him, it was a calling.  It sounds ridiculous but he was truly magnificent at it and although I considered him a workaholic, it was never really a job to him.  It was a way of life. 

But what I want to talk about was his coaching.  At the beginning of the year at registration, the coaches would set up tables to try and recruit Freshmen into going out for their sports.  Now, cross-country is clearly not the most popular sport so my dad took this recruiting very seriously.  Most boys and girls hurried over to the football or volleyball tables with the sporty, popular kids.  Although there were a few sporty, popular kids who wanted to be on the cross-country team, there were not enough to earn team points to win meets so my dad had to get smart.  He started looking for the kids who were scrawny or shy or didn’t make very good eye-contact.  In short, the awkward kids who might not have any other sporting options.  He recruited the kids that otherwise would not have participated in activities.  He gave them what they needed.  He believed in them until they believed in themselves.

He made them part of a team.  Most of my dad’s teams were like this.  They were made up of students from all of the groups in school.  Jocks, nerds, so called “burnouts”, and occasionally someone from the Special Education classes.  I’m sure he originally did this to have enough warm bodies to earn team points but what followed was a life philosophy. These students were no longer in separate cliques.  They were Runners and running is hard.  It hurts and there is sometimes puking and when you are in a group of people and you’re all in pain and all puking, you have a new clique.  Runners. 

It didn’t matter what happened at home or in school that day.  When the 3:30 bell rang, your team would be waiting for you out under the flagpole for practice.  There would be stretching and warm-ups and something called “hills” which was awful.  Individual goals would be set.  Just to try and get a better time at the next meet.  Each individual goal met meant that the team would earn more points.  Everyone bought into it.  Everyone supported and encouraged and cheered and helped out.  During meets the football team stopped their practices and cheered for our runners! (Thanks Coach Zim)

But it was more that just a cross-country team.  It spread into the hallways during school.  You wouldn’t just pass by a nerd and not say hello if they were a member of your team.  You wouldn’t let someone pick on someone else who was a member of your team.  Having something in common (pain, puking, goals) actually produced kindness, respect and friendship among students who wouldn’t ordinarily look in the general direction of someone outside of their social group. 

But it was even more than that.  My dad truly was a father to so many kids.  Once when I was in high school he bought a gently used pair of running shoes for someone on his team.  The student had been running in the only pair of shoes that she owned and they were not running shoes.  My dad said he was concerned that she would get injured in those shoes.  He told me not to say anything because he was going to tell her he found them in the locker room and that someone had left them there after last season.  He didn’t want her to know that he bought them.  At the time this happened I was mad.  I wanted a “new” pair of shoes.  I wanted him to pay attention to me.  I didn’t understand the impact of what he had done until years later.  It wasn’t about getting injured in those shoes.  It was about putting her on even playing ground in a social situation.  Anyone could take one look at the shoes she had been running in and know that her family couldn’t afford to buy her running shoes.  He saved her from the dirty looks and judgments at meets.  With the shoes he “found” she was just a Runner like everyone else.  She was a member of the team with her own personal goals to achieve while helping out her fellow teammates.

There are countless other stories like these which I won’t recall because I want to respect people’s privacy.  There were phone calls in the middle of the night, visits on Sundays to families, deaths, illnesses, abuse and shame that my dad helped kids and their families through.  I can only realize this now as I piece these things together because my dad never told us stories about these situations.  But I know they existed.  I am ashamed that I was ever jealous of these other kids. I don’t get called Mr. Guyot’s Daughter very often anymore.  I would be proud to wear that name.

Today we would call this “Building Community”.  The community that my dad built was huge.  There were so many people at his funeral that it was held in the high school gym in order to accommodate everyone.  The support was overwhelming and I am sad that I was too angry to receive any of it.

Occasionally, one of my dad’s really amazing runners would defect to the football team.  Although this was disappointing, my dad would let them know that there would always be a spot on the cross-country team for them if they ever decided to come back.  The team would always welcome them back. Sometimes I feel like I am one of my dad’s runners.  I don’t really fit into any group of people.  I’ve always been too nerdy for the cool kids and a little too weird for the straight-laced crowd. Sometimes I still wonder what my place in this world is.Although my dad taught me to find my voice through the Speech & Drama Team, and he taught me to respect others and to be generous with my time and efforts, today on Father’s Day I’m thinking of the big life lesson.  I think that when I’m having a day (or week or year) where I’m not quite sure where my place is, he would want me to know that my team is always waiting for me under the flagpole to start warming up so I can tackle those hills, reach my goals, and in turn, help out the rest of the members of my team.

Happy Father’s Day.

-Mr. Guyot’s Daughter

It's the most wonderful time of year...sort of.

The holidays are quickly approaching and while we make our preparations, we also reminisce about the holidays of our childhood. Maybe you’re thinking about time spent with family, decorating the tree, listening to Christmas music, baking cookies and opening gifts. This time of year always reminds me of one particular thing. My dad walking through the house, muttering under his breath those three magical words: “I hate Christmas.” Christmas Eve was a special time for most people, a time to begin a couple of days off of work and to travel and spend time with family. It was also the day that would begin and end my dad’s Christmas shopping.

Looking back on my childhood, clearly it was my mom who took care of Christmas shopping when we were little. We always got some things that we wanted and then there were things that might not be on the list but that my mom just knew would be right for us. (Great job, Mom!) I am not kidding when I say that my dad shopped on Christmas Eve. I would sometimes accompany him on these trips and I remember one year, maybe we got snowed in or maybe he was just really late getting started, but we had to shop in town at the local five and dime store. I specifically remember being adamant about him NOT buying my mom a cast iron skillet for Christmas. Even as a kid I knew this was a bad idea. To be fair, I can’t even imagine the Christmases my dad grew up with. My grandparents were notorious for giving us gifts such as toilet paper and Wrigley’s gum.

When we returned home from our Christmas Eve shopping trips, he would have me wrap all the gifts because I was good at it. This was my first lesson in how the world works. Sometimes I still get fooled by this one and am always envious of people who can fake incompetency. So I would happily wrap all the gifts for my mom because my dad asked me to and because he thought I was good at something. I remember one Christmas my dad had gone out on his own and gotten my sister and I gifts. They were wrapped in brown paper grocery bags since he had done his own wrapping. I have no recollection of what the gifts were, but I do have a clear memory of how proud of himself he was that he had an idea on his own that he thought would be perfect for us.

Things took a turn when I was in college. I went along with my dad for another gift buying trip and we were going into the bookstore. I had a list of books that I wanted and was happy knowing that I was on my dad’s stomping ground and it would be easy for him to pick out something off the list and I would get what I wanted. I thought it was a bonding moment for us because my dad LOVED books. I thought he would look at the list and maybe comment on some of the feminist authors or ask me about what I was reading. He looked at the list, handed it back to me and said, “Why don’t you just get some of these and meet me back at the front counter.” Yep. Bonding moment over. Things got worse when we returned home and he wanted me to wrap everything, including my own gifts. I refused. I don’t remember the exact way I did it but I do remember that he seemed really mad about the way I was speaking to him.

I think about that now, 18 years after his death and I wonder if I would be happy to wrap presents for him now that he would’ve been 70 years old. I remember the times he really did try, like when I was a teenager and he got me a Navy Pea coat from the surplus store that he really thought I wanted, only to find out I was more interested in a $4 Marine trench coat from Goodwill. (He traded it in for me although he never understood why I would want the old thing.) I’ll never get to know what Christmas would be like if he were here now. Unlike Kevin Costner in Field of Dreams, I’ll never get to have that catch with my dad. (Speaking metaphorically here, I suck at sports) It’s funny how a lot of the things that used to bother me about my dad have now become the memories I have of him. They are endearing to me now because it reminds me that he was human. It makes me think that when I leave this world, maybe my friends will remember all the really annoying, bothersome things about me and wrap them in with the good things and have a good laugh. And although it hasn’t happened yet this year, when I hear my husband utter those three words, “I hate Christmas”, I’ll just turn away and smile and probably roll my eyes, knowing that it is Christmas music to my ears.

Happy Holidays