My Dad's favorite phrase was
"sweeter after difficulty" - or "Dulcius Ex Asperis"
for any Latin purists.
It's the Clan Ferguson (yes there's a real clan) motto.
"Dulcius Ex
Asperis" and a bee on a jaggy thistle all-proper.
My Dad was a Ferguson through and through and thought the motto made complete
sense.
His belief was that difficulty was
part of nature - like the change of weather. And, as it was inevitable, it should be met with acceptance. Without blame or shame. With open-eyed observance, rather than avoidance.
Difficulty could
hurt, damage, cause doubt and pain. It might even knock you over
but it couldn’t ever break you, not without your say so.
As inevitably as
it came, the weather would pass and nothing could feel sweeter than getting back on
your feet again, with the sun coming out.
Than stretching your
arms and taking a breath. Strong.
My dad like to wear check
shirts. And socks and sandals when he wore shorts. His nose would take on
gigantic bulbous proportions with too much sun. He and my mum loved dancing. He
was nimble in his feet. Loved when Shirley Bassey was on TV, and would
suck the sir through his teeth whenever there were snakes.
My dad invented
"Chinese egg" and he'd always pick me up from a station so I wouldn't
have to catch a taxi. He had the most hilarious arguments with my Mum about how
to cook fish and he had the bluest of blue eyes.
7 years ago this
week I looked down at my father on a hospital bed, trying to ingrain the image
of him in my head, knowing I’d never see him again. Yet, still I see him, in my own hands, or when I try to style my hair, in my son's bluest of blue eyes.
In my mind both
my parents are on a cruise in the Bahamas. The ship has all the mod
cons apart from (ridiculously) phone reception and my parents really
should complain about that, but they're having such a good time they don't.
My dad
is wearing shorts and his nose has taken on gigantic bulbous
proportions because of too much sun. He and my Mum are having an ongoing
argument about the right way to cook fish. Sitting at the Captain's table. Or
nimble on the dance floor. Far away from snakes. To the music of Shirley
Bassey.
But this week,
every year, the weather changes. It has to. It's inevitable.
This week every
year I’m reminded who I am.
I've grown to love your parents without ever meeting them because of you and your brother. They truly live on in you. x
ReplyDeleteLovely words, but you know how to make a girl greet Lynn!! Miss you Auntie Netta & Uncle Robert xxx
ReplyDeleteThank you Nancy x And as for you Lady Jackson, you're just remembering who you are xxx
ReplyDelete*clicks mihi placet button*... x
ReplyDeleteAwe. Very sweet. Very nice story. I'm lucky, my parents are alive and healthy. They adopted me when I was five. I went back to Detroit to visit them in November. I should go again soon.
ReplyDeleteLovely words, you and your brother have helped me through some rough times, Thanks for that! Stay proud of who you are and never forget. sending my love to the Ferguson family.
ReplyDeleteThank you xxx
ReplyDeleteThanks for this. I like your Bahama cruise theory. I think we all have some people that we'd like to imagine riding those waves.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful; lost my Dad when he was 85, Sept 2010. I'm an only child, so I try hard to keep my memories, without anyone to help me. Mom and I are hanging in there.. but she's getting dimentia now, so I'm watching her slip away, along with all our chats about the good ol' days. Thanks for making me laugh a little. If a guy drops in on your parent's fish dinner - it's probably my Dad, he LOVED fish and chips. lol @hoborobot
ReplyDeleteI hope so. i love that x
DeleteYou're a fine daughter...your parents must have been and would continue to be proud.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much Brian x
Delete