“So Dad, what do you want for Father’s Day?”
This annual question from my five kids is a fact of life, just as
inevitable as the $15 billion dollars our kids and spouses will shell out this
year to mark our big day with ties, cards, tools and brunches. (For budgetary
purposes, that’s $135 per household).
As I realize just how few Father’s Days remain before my kids
enter adulthood, I can’t help but personalize my kids’ question: “What do I
want for my kids this Father’s Day?”
After all, I have enough ties. Reflecting on past Father’s Days,
I’ve come up with what I actually want: seven truths I want to prayerfully
recommit to giving my kids this day — and always.
1. Father’s blessing. One of my five kids recently gave me a
little “What I love about Dad” booklet. “When I was little, I loved to … ” one
page began, and this child completed the sentence with the words, “be rocked to
sleep by you.” Her bedtime memories date to the pre-Wi-Fi era, when we dads
were less distracted and better at holding our precious children for longer
periods of time. This Father’s Day, let’s renew the bedrock of fatherhood by
giving our kids our loving touch, bedtime rituals and our father’s blessing
before they drift off to sleep.
2. Wrestling. In an “All about my Dad” card my 7-year-old son
gave me recently, he scrawled, “I love when my dad resels with me.” My dad
wrestled me and now I’m getting pummeled on a regular basis. Recent studies
show that kids who roughhouse with their dads are more self-confident and
self-controlled. Especially in our digital age, rough-and-tumble play needs to
be part of our job description as dads. Happy wrestling, Dad!
3. Kissing Mommy. It’s just a fact: Whenever I demonstrate my
love for my wife with a special touch or focused attention, the kids
immediately perk up, and at least one of them sprints toward us to hug our legs
or leap into our laps. “The best thing parents can do for their children is to
love one another,” notes one social worker on the proven long-term benefits
kids experience, including healthy self-esteem. So, let’s celebrate Father’s
Day in style, with public affection for our beautiful better halves.
4. Listening. “We always have the best time when we … ” one of my
daughters wrote, “go on drives together.” Referring to our drives when it’s
just the two of us — with no texting, screens, or other interruptions — she
reminds me of that endangered gift which I owe each of my children year-round:
my presence and undivided attention, which can only be rooted, of course, in
daily attentiveness to God in prayer. This Father’s Day, let’s give thanks to
our heavenly Father, the source of the best gifts that we impart to our
children.
5. Smile lines. “Daddy, I love your … ” one of my kids wrote to
me, “smile lines.” “Rejoice always,” St. Paul wrote, and hopefully the faces
our kids behold reflect the joy of our deep and growing faith within. “Smile!”
summarizes one social science study, “it makes everyone in the room feel better
because they, consciously or unconsciously, are smiling with you.” So, this
Father’s Day, let’s kick back, relax and enjoy our yearslong project of
developing good smile lines.
6. Handshakes. “I love getting your advice on … ” the booklet
began, which my daughter completed, “how to shake hands and make eye contact in
a way that will get me a job.” I read her words with a surge of pride. On
Father’s Day, let’s go easy on the kids, but starting the next day, it’s back
to coaching them 24/7 to prepare for effective interactions in the world.
7. Calling forth the best. “It means so much that you show me how
to … ” my daughter’s booklet began, and she wrote, “be the best person that I
can be.” Few joys can compare with a dad’s experience of nurturing and calling
forth a gift or talent in his child. The blessing of fatherhood gives us a
front-row seat to two miracles: first, our child’s birth, and second, the
development of their utterly unique spiritual, intellectual and physical gifts.
“So Dad, what do you want for Father’s Day?” I know my kids will
ask.
I’ll smile and I’m not sure what I’ll say. But my heart will
answer with the words of Jesus that dads will fittingly hear in the Gospel
reading on Father’s Day: “Everything that the Father has is mine.” In Christ,
I’m a dad who already has everything. All I want is to give thanks.
Johnson is diocesan director of evangelization.