I took my annual visit to the Talking Story archives this morning, in honor of my Dad’s birthday, and decided our Papa Angel whispers need to bless these blog pages too.
Hau‘oli lā hānau ke Lani Papa ~ Happy Birthday-in-Heaven Dad; your influence lives on in this humble life we lead here within earthly places, and our love, born through you, burns strong and bright. We still listen for those angel whispers, and always will.
What follows is a story I had written for Talking Story on the blog’s first December 6th. Each year, I read it again, drinking in the day like a nourishing smoothie. In 2006 I had printed a newly edited version, for my daughter had asked me to write up “the part where our Papa Angel whispers to us at night.”
This is for her, and for all of us who knew and loved my dad, pictured above with my son Zach in 1988. Perhaps it will help you think of someone you love as your December angel too.
Hau‘oli la hanau Dad, Happy Birthday!
December 6th will always mean just one thing to me: Today is my Dad’s birthday.
Dad is no longer with us; his was a life much too short. As we had explained to my young children the first Christmas we had without him, now sixteen years ago [23 as of this 2013 writing] heaven needs a lot of angels during this holiday season, and their Papa was one of those people who answered the call.
What we explained went something like this all the years when they were younger. They know it by heart now, so they can explain to their children one day in their own words, and with their mana‘o (what it means to them);
“The angels whisper in our ears while we are sleeping, so we dream the December dreams that reasonable people should dream right now. We want to be good, unselfish people who think with gratitude for what we have, way more than with wishfulness for what we don’t have.
Angel whispers are soft and gentle, and they help our thoughts sleep well, unbothered by the noisy beating of our hearts which never sleep, and without the confusion life can bring when we’re awake. Ours should be the dreams of a baby born with all the glorious possibility of a wonderful life to come, just like the baby Jesus. Then, when we awake in the morning we are newly blessed, with the angel’s whisper mixing perfectly with our own Aloha Spirit.
Papa is our personal angel, and because he went to heaven, his whispers can warm a lot of children’s hearts right now, not just ours.”
My dad had died two days before Thanksgiving, and we’ve since looked at those days which dutifully march between then and today, December 6th, as his ‘angel’s boot camp’ where every angel joins hands, hearts, and wings. They get the annual training they will need before our Lord sends them out to the world to help Santa, and help us, so that in turn we help each other, becoming angels on earth, practicing for the days we get our own wings.
And as many stories do, especially when they are told as a way to comfort someone, and help the hurting heart remember another, this one has taken on a life of its own. It has gotten magnified into quite a few variations over sixteen years’ time, for my mom’s eleven grandchildren and three great-grandchildren, and for a variety of reasons. My dad is now Super Angel!
Papa’s Shopping Angel Story
The telling of “Papa’s Shopping Angel Story” is a December tradition where fact and fantasy have eagerly meshed together, spreading its’ own Christmas cheer and adding a kind of magic to these early weeks of the month where even Santa must go through panic attacks as days are marked off the calendar.
Papa’s Shopping Angel Story is also one not told in a single sitting; it’s become the background music singing in our heads for a few weeks, always lasting through the entire Christmas season. Sometimes it starts around Thanksgiving, but always, as sure as the sun comes up that morning, December 6 is the day we start to tell it to each other out loud. Everyone in the family does it, and from up in heaven, Dad makes sure none of us misses a beat in preparing for Christmas day.
You see one of the true facts we all knew about my Dad, was that he was that very rare man who loved going shopping. My dad was thought of as a fairly low-key, quiet and reserved gentleman, but shopping became a social event for him after he had retired from his full-time job. He was up bright and early every single Sunday to read the paper, for that was the day the front page was usually only a protective covering for a ream of flyers and advertisements. If by chance it was raining (other than on Mauna Kea, there’s no snow in Hawaii!) Dad got up extra early to meet the delivery boy and make sure the paper didn’t get wet.
There was this unwritten rule that no one could touch the familiar yellow Long’s Drugs ad until Dad had peeled the rest of the paper’s clutter away from it and studied it with his morning coffee before we headed out to church. After church, Dad dropped us off at home, and went shopping. In the weeks between Thanksgiving and Christmas, Dad’s Sunday ritual became a near-daily event: no one enjoyed the both the glitz and genuine caring of the season more than Dad.
Dad knew every cashier by name in every retail store in Pearl City, the neighborhood we lived in. And they knew him. The rest of us were just “Jerry’s family” to most of them, but they all knew what we were getting for Christmas, and exactly why my Dad felt it was the perfect gift for us. They knew if we deserved it because of something special we did – and the entire story that went with it – or if it would be under the tree Christmas Day only because Dad loved us. On my own shopping excursions days later, I’d get accustomed to the all-knowing looks my way, or hearing a cashier say, “You lucky girl, just wait until you see what Santa will bring you this year!”
There’s so much else involved with Papa’s Shopping Angel Story, and each year’s memory-telling adds and embellishes as the best stories will do in their warmly encouraging way. We all loved to go shopping with Dad (when we were allowed to) because in the frenzy of the season we were positive there was an angel perched on his shoulder; the man could quickly find the perfect parking spot no matter how hectic the shopping weekend, no handicap sticker required. His research had paid off, and he found the deals of the century. If you bought something with him it was guaranteed not to show up cheaper somewhere else. Dad was my own personalized search engine long before Google’s founders were out of diapers.
So this morning, I woke up very early, instantly realizing I was already late with some of my own holiday preparations and had to get started with loving and relishing every day that is left in this wonder-filled month. Heart, mind and soul must be completely open for every single thing December has to offer me. I can’t go wrong with Dad’s angel on my shoulder.
I know you’re busy. So am I. Believe me, I love my role, my work and what I do just as much as you do, and there are still those faultingly-human times I kid myself into believing I’m indispensable too. However, this is one of the rare times you’ll hear me say, Let the business go:
Trust that the investments you’ve made all year long will help it survive on its’ own. And whatever you do, DO NOT start any new projects this month, adding to anyone else’s plate. If you ask for extra time off, and your boss lays a guilt trip on you about it, ignore it, smile, and hand him or her a candy cane while you say Mahalo (thank you), Mele Kalikimaka Kākou! (Merry Christmas for all of us.)
Enjoy the month, every holiday and family bit of it.
Enjoy the hunt for that parking space.
Enjoy the double bagging to hide brand names, and pretending the latch to the car trunk is busted so you can stash your lunch-break purchases.
Enjoy the wonder of plastic and your great credit rating.
Enjoy sweeping up falling pine-needles and perfectly re-stacking the gifts you just wrapped so the bows don’t get crushed.
Get your family to sit around the dinner table and not in front of the TV, so you can start telling the snippets of your own family Christmas stories and love each other.
And by the way, since my dad’s not here anymore, say a few kind words to all those store employees working so hard to make Christmas as merry as they can for us. Since I’m here on O‘ahu right now, I’m filling up the gas tank and driving out to Longs Drugs in Pearl City. Dad will help me find a great parking space, I know he will.
More from the Aloha Archives:
- Sunday Mālama: Dads are Forever.
- Sunday Mālama: On Mothers and Mothering, Fathers and Fathering
- Teaching ‘Ohana Values
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