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Eulogy to Another Great Dad

boys1979About five years ago, one of the earliest readers of this blog was generous enough to share the life story of his beloved father, who had recently died before his time. I called the post Eulogy to a Great Dad. It was one of my favorite stories, because it was apparent through his son’s words that this man had really devoted his life to being a good father and a good person in general.

Dad stories are also particularly meaningful to me because it’s my own primary mission in life right now. My main motivation for retiring early was a desire to put that role as the top thing in my life. At age 30, I set aside 20 years for this project with a goal of being cool, understanding and infinitely supportive to any kids I might have, with anything else coming a distant second. Now eleven years into that project, it remains the one thing in my current life that I manage to stick to without any compromise, and thus without any regret.

Lots of this was inspired by warm memories from my own upbringing. Our entire family, while not the glamorous and self-actualized group of perfect humans they used to make TV shows about, was still way up there on the happy outcomes scale. My Dad was a big part of that, always thoughtful and non-judgemental, encouraging learning and healthy behavior and frugal living through his presence in the household. Although my parents ended up separating in the early 1990s, they finished most of the hard work of raising us four kids first, and I know how much work that must have been.

The highlights of this father-and-son relationship revolve around music, writing, learning and travel. My Dad had been a musical semi-genius since birth, and as a result our childhood came with free impromptu concerts every day. He was always disappearing to play some badass jazz piano on the glossy black 1974 Yamaha upright, or picking effortlessly on the acoustic guitar, occasionally throwing in formal or silly lyrics with his fine tenor voice. In the 1980s, he let me move the family stereo system permanently into my bedroom to nurture my own budding love of Music All The Time. All four of his kids now place music at the top of their list of favorite things in life.

In 1983 he reached the age of 40, and bought a red and black Kawasaki motorcycle, joking it was a frugal way to address a midlife crisis. I was 9 years old at the time, and that summer we embarked on a long roadtrip down to Kentucky – just the two of us, with just some saddle bags full of clothes and picnic supplies. I still remember every detail of that trip – the thrill of highway travel with the asphalt rushing just below your feet, the novelty of crossing the US border and the stern nature of the officer who questioned us, the steep winding road to the Best Western hotel on a panoramic hilltop, and a week of spelunking and guided tours in the wild underground world of Mammoth Cave National park. Decades later, we would both still cite that Father and Son Adventure of Questionable Safety as one of the highlights of both of our lives.

Eventually all of us kids grew up, and our relationships remained loving and open. We’re oddballs in the sense that we don’t tend to remember each other’s birthdays, or remember to make the right phone calls or send the right greeting cards, but once reunited we resume the deepest and most interesting conversations as if we had never left the room a year earlier.

Starting this blog in 2011 brought an unexpected boost in my friendship with my dad, as he was one of the first subscribers and continued to read every article as they came out. He would often send me his thoughts on posts he enjoyed – searching my email reveals at least 50 such emails, with titles like “Latest MMM” or “Current Column.” He even participated occasionally in the writing, once sharing this post about frugal shaving, and another time interacting playfully in the comments section with my sister as if they were not related. Like me, he connected more deeply with people through writing and his own career was as a writer of advertising, editorials, books, and articles.

I learned a lot from Dad, and he claimed to learn a few things as he watched me grow into adulthood as well. Noticing the heavy emotional burden that negative thoughts would place on my life as early as high school, I deliberately became an optimist instead, reading self-development books and experimentally applying their principles to the world. The stuff actually worked, and he noted the ongoing benefits of what I called Outrageous Optimism, as he watched things happen in my life that he had formerly assumed were not possible. He decided he should work a bit more on optimism as well.

During university, he let me move into the spare bedroom in his apartment which was near the campus, and I enjoyed teaching him weight training and physical fitness while he taught me about stock investing and jazz piano chords. Those two years of being adult roommates were a valuable finish to my time of growing up as his son.

It was a good thing that all these good things happened during our lives together, because in October of 2016, he started having some difficulties with certain words, prompting his caring wife to start keeping track of unusual occurrences in a dated journal. His appetite shrank a little, and he lost a few pounds from his already-slim frame.

One day, in a slow-motion piece of cinematic tragedy, his wedding ring slid off of a narrowing ring finger as he walked through a parking lot, and it turned out to be lost forever, like the growing number of words he could no longer quite bring to mind.

He checked into a hospital, where they scanned his head and found that a dark mass had formed within.

When I went back to Canada to visit him in that hospital, I could hardly believe he was sick. He looked just fine – same alert eyes set in friendly wrinkles, the same compact and upright body, and the same familiar voice. But he was also significantly different – focused oddly on the present and with very little concept of the future.  He was able to understand advanced conversations and free from worry, but with quite a bit of difficulty expressing concepts or figuring out how to find his place in a book.

The problem was a rare but incredibly tough form of brain tumor called Glioblastoma. Affecting people seemingly at random, this type of cancer builds itself into a lump in your head that grows very rapidly, crowding out the blood circulation that allows your normal thought processes to take place. Patients of this form of cancer live only a few months to a couple of years, depending on whether or not you can slow it down with surgery and radiation.

These last few months were tough, as this brilliant, witty man faded quickly to become a confused, sleepy person with limited speech and recognition, who then faded purely to sleep. His last systems finally shut down on the evening of January 13th, thankfully in an extremely peaceful hospice with loved ones nearby.

We’re all sad, of course, but also much more grateful than I would have imagined. Although cut short by a decade or two, our Dad’s life overall was one of a lucky person. Like the first Great Dad at the start of this article, Dad’s four children and the loving wife that survives him have great respect for the way he lived, and his six grandchildren will have only fond memories of a man of readily offered kindness.

For my part, his sudden passing has shaken up my life. Originally shocked and depressed to hear what was happening to him, I eventually passed on to accept reality, and also become much more aware of what mortality really means. I’ve lived a long time already, and it has been quite an experience. But it really could end at any moment, and even if I evade disaster, the odds say I’ve used up a full 50% of my lifespan.

Perhaps even more notably, I’m suddenly on the tipping point between the labels “young guy” and “middle-aged man.” I’ve been a young adult forever, and this is the first time in life I’ve realized that stage can actually end. This means that it would be foolish for me to waste any of it, and I am suddenly much more hesitant to let any days go to waste.

If you found out this evening that you only had one month to live, imagine how deeply you would crave that warm carefree phase of your life that came just before – when the supply of healthy days seemed unlimited and you could do anything. That unlimited supply of life, which you took for granted and wasted on unnecessary arguments and commuting and television, would suddenly seem like the most precious and unattainable luxury in the world.

I realized that for now, I am still in that happy, carefree summer of unlimited life. I still have the luxury that my Dad lost so suddenly, and holy shit do I feel lucky to have it now. So I’m going to get up and enjoy a lot more good times while this sun shines.

Grandpa MM with son baby MMM, circa 1975.

Grandpa MM with son baby MMM, circa 1975.

Afterword:

Beyond the living descendants and many memories in everyone he knew, my Dad left behind plenty of written words and even some music. We found his little digital studio recorder sitting on top of that same black Yamaha piano, which still sits in the house where his wife now lives, newly alone. The memory card contained five beautiful little songs he had been working on recently, and they captured his memory for me above all other mementos.

I can hear his soul perfectly in the timing of every one of these notes, and see his hands, still infinitely nimble after 73 years, hitting the black and white keys as they flew across the piano, powered by a mind that had thought in terms of music since 1943.

I have uploaded a copy here just in case you want to put on some headphones and play it for yourself. These songs didn’t have names, but my sister decided this one can be called “Stars”

 

Rest in peace, Dad – we will all do our best to live on and live well, in your honor.

 

  • Paul January 19, 2017, 12:22 am

    My condolences. I’m sorry to hear about your loss. Grandpa MM’s advice and kindness lives on in your blog and with your readers.

  • Catherine January 19, 2017, 12:28 am

    MM I’m so sorry for your loss–I write this listening to your father’s beautiful composition. Many prayers of healing for you and your family. I lost my amazing Dad 3 years ago. So grateful to have had him as a father! I know yours lives on in you.

  • Charlotte January 19, 2017, 12:31 am

    Beautiful. You’ve obviously inherited your father’s talent for writing. I’m so sorry for your loss, but so glad you shared such a wonderful relationship with him. May that bond be passed on through many more generations… x

  • jwh January 19, 2017, 1:55 am

    Sorry to hear this. It is hard watching someone you love and is so strong decline this way.

    This simple point resonated with me.

    “That unlimited supply of life, which you took for granted and wasted on unnecessary arguments and commuting and television, would suddenly seem like the most precious and unattainable luxury in the world.”

    I was diagnosed with a brain tumour in 2014, Medulloblastoma. I am one of the fortunate ones to have recovered physically with only minor complaints. Mentally I am so much stronger.

    I try to follow a more simple life. Focusing on the important things like this beautiful planet full of wonders, watching swallows fly around the park on my walk to work, my family, the fact I am healthy enough to exercise outdoors, swimming in the sea, my friends and being kind to people.

    Small arguments, being insulted by someone I barely know. Comparing myself, my material possessions, and my success by another persons criteria. It just doesnt matter and these things wash out of my mind on the breeze as soon as they come in, usually….

    Even having gone through that and seeing mortality as vividly as a brain tumour. Occasionally I will fall into the “sweating the small stuff” trap.
    I pull myself out, focus on how lucky I am and spend my energy on the wonderful things in life. I wish I had this philosophy without having to get sick, but hey, I truly consider myself as one of the luckiest people in the world.

    Now go and hug someone you love, look at their face and appreciate that you have that person in your life.

  • Mel Jones January 19, 2017, 2:14 am

    Hi, sorry for your loss. I lost my mother to glioblastoma in 2012. Your article about your father is very beautiful. With best wishes.

  • Philippa January 19, 2017, 2:40 am

    Thank you for sharing those beautiful memories of a great father. I’m so sorry for your loss and I hope holding onto your own family even tighter will bring some comfort. Sharing your father’s beautiful music with all of us was incredibly generous. Thank you.

  • Brian January 19, 2017, 2:45 am

    Sorry for your loss, MMM. When you can eulogize a parent like you have, as a son, that is a sign of a job well done as a Dad. Fond, happy memories of adventures shared together and lessons learned from our mentors are what counts as they guide us in our own journey. Like another poster said, take extra care of yourself during this time, whatever that means for you.

  • Shaunae January 19, 2017, 2:49 am

    What a story! So sorry for your loss! I lost my father when I was 12 and I still remember some things!

  • Gen January 19, 2017, 3:00 am

    Your words brought tears to my eyes and a smile to my dial. Not only do I like reading your posts to learn about frugality but also to learn about life. Thanks for sharing your words about your dad and for sharing some more life lessons. I’m sure your dad was super proud of you and your optimistic and generous spirit. And how lucky are we that your dad was “always thoughtful and non-judgemental, encouraging learning and healthy behavior and frugal living through his presence in the household”. He obviously inspired you, and you inspire us. That’s a legacy to be very proud of.

  • Karen S January 19, 2017, 3:29 am

    Thank you for sharing MMM. You yourself have impacted so many people for the greater good through this blog and beyond. Myself included. Your Father is beyond proud I am sure. Thank you for sharing his music with us, it is simply beautiful……

  • Mark M January 19, 2017, 3:36 am

    Lord, have mercy. I am sorry for your loss, MMM. Keep doing well by your wife and your son – this also was my conclusion after my father died suddenly three years ago. You will perhaps find that you grow up in ways you did not know about, many times into his image, sometimes in reaction to it.

    “Ego sum resurrectio et vita.”-IHS

  • frugalgirl January 19, 2017, 4:07 am

    Dear MMM,

    I am sorry to hear it about your dad. My mom also passed away half year ago. She also had brain cancer (but a metastatic from breast). Her condition pushed me toward frugality. I have seen so many young persons dying and knew that life is too short to spend it working 50h a week in order to consume just more stuff. Your blog is definitely helping to stay focused in order to retire early and have time in life to figure out what is the ultimate point of living. Stay strong.

  • Simon Williams January 19, 2017, 4:27 am

    Please accept my condolences. I’m 45 this year, my dad is 75 so we’re in a similar age group. It’s true we are only here for a short time so it’s good to appreciate all we have.

  • Mina January 19, 2017, 4:55 am

    What a fucking beautiful post.

    Thanks for another huge kick up the arse, and here’s to your wonderful dad.

    xx

  • Piotr January 19, 2017, 4:58 am

    Very sorry to hear this. My condolences to you and your family, MMM.

  • FIREin' London January 19, 2017, 5:01 am

    Hi MMM,

    Firstly, my deepest thoughts are with you at this time – having also recently lost a parent I know what a shake up and shock this can be. You have some wonderful memories of your father, so cherish them, and keep them as they will be with you forever – and the same will be true for your children (depending how many you end up with!) in the future.

    Stay strong, and good luck
    FiL

  • Charis January 19, 2017, 5:12 am

    This was incredibly both moving and hopeful.

    Your father sounds like a true gem of a person.

    My sincerest condolences to you and your family.

  • EmmaleeB January 19, 2017, 5:16 am

    MMM – I’m so sorry for your loss. Your dad was evidently a fantastic guy; I remember reading his contribution to this blog and thinking how much he reminded me of my own amazing father. Thank you for sharing these personal feelings and precious remembrances with us, and inspiring us to look more gratefully and optimistically at our lives and relationships. Peace to you.

  • Rick January 19, 2017, 5:56 am

    MR. MM,
    I am sorry for you lost your dad. Your eulogy reminded me what is important in life.

  • Mireille January 19, 2017, 6:02 am

    I am sorry for your loss. This is a beautiful eulogy. Your family will be in my thoughts.

  • The Green Swan January 19, 2017, 6:03 am

    MMM, I’m so sorry to hear this! Sounds like you had a great connection with your Dad. The song is beautiful, thanks for sharing it along with the lovely memories. I’m wishing you and your family all the best!

  • Rogier de Groot January 19, 2017, 6:03 am

    My condoleances for you MMM.

    Blessings, rogier

  • rappelj January 19, 2017, 6:17 am

    I hear you from my heart in this great tribute. Made my thoughts wonder out, again, and appreciate my luck and question if I’m doing it well as I can.

    Am blessed that Ma & Pa are still up beat, sharp, happy and willing/ eager contributors at +90, passing on this and that to our whole (huge) clan since for ever. They still act as the major and most reliable family news distribution hub. They are old school in this, sometimes a note pad/ calendar for dates, but mostly just the gray cells and a telephone for help. Maybe that’s their “cross fit” training for the brain.

    But I also had a “Oh-Ha” experience on 02Jan’17. Our 3nd grandchild came to this world. Funny, but this was the first time really that I was ‘Gramp” in my head and not the father of a daughter have healthy, active kids of her own. A small but interesting reset in outlook on things.
    Life is strange and great and on going.
    I think that old “firetruck” I just found might be something fun for the “kids” & me to think and develop on.
    Yes, life is good.

    MMM All the best.

  • Nancy January 19, 2017, 6:17 am

    Sorry for your loss, happy that you have such great memories/experiences with your Dad. Thanks for sharing.

  • Mike January 19, 2017, 6:29 am

    Thanks for the music.
    And thanks for all the fish.

    M.

  • Karen January 19, 2017, 6:33 am

    I’m so sorry about your dad MMM. I listened to Stars and sat quietly thinking about my own long gone dad. It was a lovely piece of music to reminisce to. Your love for your dad shone through your writing. His love seemed to shine right back at you through his music. Thank you for sharing.

  • aceyou January 19, 2017, 6:36 am

    If the quality of one of his sons is any indicator, he must have been a great man.

  • Asbjørn January 19, 2017, 6:44 am

    Thanks for sharing, MMM. <3 Beautiful piano piece :)

  • Brian January 19, 2017, 7:19 am

    Sorry for your loss, Thanks for sharing his music.

  • Mendy January 19, 2017, 7:20 am

    Thank you for being vulnerable and sharing your Dad’s legacy with us, and giving us this reminder at the beginning of this new year of how precarious life can be and the intentionality and optimism with which we should live each moment!

  • Mark Lovelace January 19, 2017, 7:22 am

    A beautiful tribute. Brought tears of remorse, and joy to my eyes. Thanks for sharing.

  • The Long Haul Investor January 19, 2017, 7:38 am

    Beautiful post. I’m sure your father is proud of it, and happy that you could share his work with millions of people.

  • Andrea January 19, 2017, 7:49 am

    MMM and family, I’m so very sorry for your loss. I also lost my dad to GBM. Sincere condolences to you all.

  • DM January 19, 2017, 7:59 am

    God Bless you and your family during this trying time. You are an inspiration and one of the reasons I’m walking away from a six figure job before formally reaching FI. I’ve come to realize that we have enough, and also the faith that there will be more to come. We are self-funding a sabbatical specifically to grow and spend time as a family (wife and 2 year old), and frankly there is nothing else I can think of that I’d rather spend money on.

    With respect,
    Daniel

  • Edith January 19, 2017, 8:46 am

    I’m sorry for your loss, MMM. I recently lost the grandmother who raised me and, therefore, have thought more about how to live life in the face of death. Stoics say we should think about that often.

  • Jen Baron January 19, 2017, 8:53 am

    I’m so sorry for your loss. Sure sounds like he was one of the good ones!

  • Cindy in the South January 19, 2017, 8:56 am

    I am so sorry for your loss. I lost my mom to pancreatic cancer. She was diagnosed in June, and dead on November 2nd. Cancer sucks.

  • Pete January 19, 2017, 8:57 am

    I’m terribly sorry to hear of your loss, MMM. A father and son bond is something powerful, and it sounds like your dad was an incredible man, father, and friend. Outrageous optimism is a powerful thing though. It lets us see the light in the darkest situations, and celebrating his beautiful life (and music) is a wonderful way to see that light. Thank you for sharing his story with us. I’m sure that he is very proud of the man that you’ve become, as well as the amazing father you are to Junior ‘Stache.

  • Readinglearner January 19, 2017, 9:03 am

    My condolences to you and your family for such a loss.

  • Mark January 19, 2017, 9:43 am

    Beautifully written. Thank you for sharing.

  • Diane C January 19, 2017, 9:48 am

    Having lost two parents in the course of about a year, I feel you and your family’s pain. I am glad you were aware of the here and now long before you lost him. May your many happy memories console you in this difficult transition.

    I am also aware and appreciative of the kindness you show to your stepmom. How wonderful that he found two good women to share his life with and that she has you for comfort.

  • Jad D. January 19, 2017, 9:50 am

    MMM, thank you for sharing your father with this community. My father died of cancer 3 years ago. The anger over it goes away; the memories (and some melancholy) stay. You get to carry him with you.

  • Ryan Steel January 19, 2017, 9:50 am

    This post really hit close to home. I lost my grandfather in a very similar way. He was a similar age. We were very close. Ten years later, it’s still hard to believe I can’t show him how well I’m doing, this new fitness tip I just found out about, complain about the Yankees.

    But without him and the skills he shared with me, I believe I wouldn’t be where I am today, in a cushy IT job awaiting FI.

    Thank you for sharing. There must’ve been a lump in your throat as you wrote this and listened to his music. Your insight and perspective continues to inspire and change my life for the better.

    Here’s to you and yours healing and may GMMM RIP.

  • Mab January 19, 2017, 9:56 am

    Condolences and prayers to you, MMM. Thank you for sharing the blessing of your dad.

  • Mike L January 19, 2017, 9:57 am

    MMM,
    It is a very difficult part of life to go through the loss of a loved one. A thought that has brought me comfort about my grandfathers recent passing is that we lived our relationship to the fullest. There is nothing I look back at and think, I could have done X better to create or maintain a stronger bond. It appears that you shared the same relationship with your father. The best part of a strong and intertwined relationship is that your daily actions will bring back memories of joyous times spent together. It sounds like Jazz Piano will be the equivalent of wrenching on things in the garage for me, it will bring you peace and joy in his memory. I am grateful that your blog has brought me closer to other family members that I did not have much in common with before. Now we share mustachianism and the trend continues.

    Ps. I shaved my moustache in his honor for the services, and to my surprise, it came back fuller than before. Thanks Poppy.

    Warm Regards to you and your family.

    -Mike

  • Cassie January 19, 2017, 10:01 am

    I choked up reading this post. I’m so sorry to hear about your loss, your father sounds like he was a wonderful man. My 7 month old son is currently sleeping upstairs, and I hope I can give him the kind of childhood and parent interaction that you had with your father, and currently have with your son. I wish you and your family all the best.

  • David C. January 19, 2017, 10:14 am

    I’m so sorry, Pete. I also lost my father to the effects of a brain tumour. I’m glad in the midst of your grief you can still think of the fantastic memories and focus on what’s truly important in life.

  • Ramin January 19, 2017, 10:22 am

    That was absolutely beautiful man, he would be proud to read that. I’ll be right back, I just have to tell the neighbors to stop cutting so many damn onions! ಥ﹏ಥ

  • Reade January 19, 2017, 10:24 am

    How wonderful that the music he made lives on and every time you play it you can remember the good times you had together. One of the reasons I enjoy this blog so much is that your motivation for early retirement was to be able to spend more time with your son. It’s obvious you had a great dad, or you wouldn’t have made this such a big goal in your life. I became a father for the first time yesterday, I hope that my daughter and I have as close of a relationship as you and your dad.

  • jason January 19, 2017, 10:38 am

    Sorry for your loss MMM. But to have someone to write such a beautiful piece about his life, I think he’d done well~

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