(written in 1974)
my father used to be a carpenter
a master craftsman
a cabinet maker extraordinaire
he'd turn these perfect round cherry wood salad bowls on his lathe
dovetail smooth fitting mahogany joints on his meticulous router
pull his whining De Walt table saw over huge planes of wood that would magically become
with his love and care and endlessly detailed patience
kitchen tables with white inlaid formica tops
custom-built wall units complete with knotty pine bookshelves for the World Book Encyclopedia
and antique scrolled top desks with french wire-netted doors that were sanded smooth as a baby's cheek and stained the tawny color of sandalwood
his woodworking shop was downstairs in the basement
the only place my mother would allow it
sort of off-limits to the rest of us mere mortals
existing in a chaos all its own
full of the smell of sawdust
and the sounds of powerful metal machines groaning together like dinosaurs in this archaic man-made sanctuary
amongst piles of wood scraps, nails, blueprints, and half-completed projects
each of the dinosaurs had a personality all its own
there was the drill press
the stately straight-backed worker who stood head and heels above the others
who with as little effort as possible bore through the lumber in the precise places where my father wished
whose only danger was in removing the spinning bit after the incision
for if you weren't careful in holding the wood down, it would fly around in a circular rage and knock your knuckles off
there was the simple jig saw
who even a small fry like me could enlist
to cut the simple shapes of stars, squares, and keys
that i stained and finished and then tried to peddle door to door in the neighborhood
whose jagged blade rode furiously up and down, up and down
like teeth
only to belie the feeling that it was cutting through the wood like butter
then there was the bigger band saw
a glorified version of the jig that wasn't quite as housebroken and could really get nasty sometimes
like the time my mother was attempting to lose her mechanical blind spot
but instead band-sawed off the end of her index finger
and came running upstairs with it in her fist
and vowed never to come down to the shop ever again
a vow that was easier said than kept
there were lots of other mechanical monsters
whose names i can't remember
but whose images i see just as clearly in my mind today as i did 35 years ago
when they were all sacred to me
each in their own spot along the narrow green pastel walls
but whose mastery always eluded me
no matter how much i'd practice
or wish i had my father's dexterity or inventiveness
you see i always identified with my mother
in this division of the sexes
she was the articulate one
the one who used words
as tools
as creators
instead of machines
the one who encouraged my liberal education
my interest in books, and Broadway shows, and how things
fit together
what did i learn from my father?
if not his scientific bent and his ability to fix anything anywhere anytime
i think i learned his curiosity and imagination and
his ability to see
his sixth sense that could
look at an object
smell it
hear it
then tell you
exactly what was
wrong with it
he was like a magnet in this regard
he was drawn to thing's imperfection
its critical flaw
like a leech to blood
like a finger to a sore
it was his genius and his achilles heel
for the more he cared about something
the more he loved it
the better he saw
the more precisely he heard
the more exactly he noticed
what was
wrong with it
the scuff on the shoe
the furrow in the brow
the crackle in the recording
the pimple on the nose
the thinness of the legs
the well from which this gift sprung was never revealed
perhaps it fed upon its own dark and troubled source
but it always reflected outward
never inward
and what it saw
it saw
flawed
and then tried to fix
sometimes my father would really surprise me
when out of the blue and for no apparent reason
he'd ask helter-skelter
"what's wrong?"
and i'd suddenly be frozen by his scalpel
caught by his glance
and just have to stop
i'd say to myself
"i don't know
is there something wrong?"
but when nothing presented itself
i'd just say "nothing"
"nothing's wrong, dad"
but then he'd tell me
"what about this
how about that
you don't look right
you look unhappy
there must be something wrong"
and pretty soon
i learned
i anticipated
i figured out
what was wrong
with me
i got to be one of the bowls
one of the records
one of the masterpieces he owned
or was creating
or needed to have
i got to see
in no uncertain terms
what was imperfect
about me
what i couldn't win
how i couldn't compete
how nothing ever was
how i never was
good enough
so that now
i've incorporated his voice
made it my own
"the critic"
for whom nothing's ever good enough
who cripples me before i walk
who chokes on the words "i love you"
and folds at the point of conflict
oh dad, poor dad
you've locked me in the closet and made me so sad
it's not your fault
but how do i get out?
how do i let you go?
maybe i'll take a course in woodworking
and learn the skills i left behind
how to wield the hammer
carve with the chisel
build the walls i never was able to construct
between you and me
between me and them
between she and i
maybe woodworking 101
will teach me how to work with flaws
how to sand over rough edges
accept imperfections
say i love you without a guarantee
commit to her in sickness and in health
to death do us part
i still love the smell of sawdust
and the line of a graceful bowl
i look down at my hands and see the fingers of a carpenter
his hands
the swollen cuticles
scarred and bloody not from the work itself
but from the endless picking
digging
picking
at
and on
himself
i forgive you, dad
you loved me as tenderly as you could
they're my fingers now
i have to build my own life
take my own wife
raise my own family
take my own risks
fall on my own knees
maybe i'll just try a little differently with my boy
let him find his own tools
say his own words
develop his own skills
fight his own battles
i'll love him
like you did me
and plant the seeds
for him to grow
i'll be a gardener
and make the soil rich
and the water pure
and the light good
my tools will be the watering can
and trowel
instead of chisel and saw
trules
tools
trowel
power
to grow into his own
sturdy
self-reliant
healthy
little tree
for some woodsman to cut down and give to a carpenter
and the cycle will start again
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Thanks so much!!!
Trules
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... material blessings, when they pass beyond the category of need, are weirdly fruitful of headache...where lemon-green the vaporous morning drips, wet sunlight on the powder of my eye... dropping small flames to light the candled grass...
🙃🌼🌀fx Ed
I wish I wrote that and I wish that I knew Joe, Happy Father's Day yourself, B