LETTER TO MY FATHER ON FATHER”S DAY
I wish we could speak as we used to do,
offering splendid advice on the road of life.
I’m sure you’d prepare me like no one else
for what to expect around the next bend.
I thank you for those hundred dollar checks
arriving each month as I worked my way
through school, an Iowa student.
I proudly returned them since you were down
in the dumps without any job and I had
plenty to eat as a short-order cook and
a dormitory dishwasher of one thousand glasses.
Perhaps I should have followed your guidance and
become a doctor or an optometrist which you claimed
was the neatest of jobs. You did endorse a veterinary
path which I dropped when I saw what vets did.
When I became a shrink I had your support
even though I warned you to save for old age;
I didn’t think I’d be making big bucks.
It turned out I did alright before the blight
of managed care did me in.
You never complained about hardships endured,
losing a father as a kid, leaving school to work.
I remember you running like a neatly groomed
Dagwood Bumpstead, catching a bus to a subway downtown.
For fifty weeks a year, you were a dutiful father of three ensconced
behind a white picket fence, burdened with supporting a mother
as well who was not as unendingly kind as you.
You tried so hard to be whiter than Wonder Bread, enduring with
dignity insulting prejudice of ignorant Wall Streeters.
“Ehrlich” means “honest” you’d say, making it almost impossible
for me to cheat or lie.
When I think of you and your generous nature I wish I could thank
you for showing me how to be a pretty good father.
Here’s hoping new satellite communication will soon
allow us to resume our two way conversations.
Until then, I hope your psoriatic itch has abated and you’ve found a way
to hang out with mom, knowing you could never survive without her.
Remind her to prepare your favorite dish of mammaliga and
kashkaval. Hoping you don’t have much trouble finding a pack of Luckies,
your Zippo lighter and an ice cold bottle of Rheingold, before settling down
at the side of a trout-laden stream.