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Readers Story Competition Winner

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

posted by Readers

Thanks to everyone who entered our Readers Story competition.  Congratulations to Noël Christianson, our first place winner!  Her determination not to lower her standards in her search for love is a valuable reminder for all of us.

"Will Date for Food" 

by Noël Christianson

"Mom, you live like there’s no tomorrow." Obviously, my son was dizzy from seeing me fold clothes, watch CNN with the phone to my ear while adjusting leg weights for final reps. I never did take living for granted. My mind’s eye carries along a rhythmic hour glass, dribbling sand with every heartbeat. It’s my reminder of this world’s short gig. Really, if I have any excesses, blame my Dad. He had a way of delivering quips that made you think. My "life’s short" attitude began incubating lap-side when he said, "You know, you start dying the moment you are born."

Whether it was his voice or teacher’s demeanor he dragged home each night, his dinner time talks made you listen. Truth had a place at our table. But life with a teacher is not always easy. At home there are no recess bells to free you from the lecture sure to come over any topic. Teachers are well-read and are trained to explain everything. There is a sure-fire system, a root to the problem, a cause and effect and historical reference to all of life’s foibles. I now know to settle in real comfy when talking with Dad.

None of his children are complaining about those dinner times. Mom scurried around tending to boiling pots and our needs. The warmth from that kitchen, conversation and good times jelled our sense of self, preparing us for the future. Unfortunately my new cynicism causes me to peer suspiciously through the clouds of steam those meals brought. Little did I know, my Truth would be "This ain’t the way your family life is gonna be."

On the Eve of my divorce anniversary (is there a Hallmark card for that?) I continue to analyze what went wrong. My sister and I share the common bond of not having good luck with men. Goodluckwithmen. It sounds like a Bavarian cookie. Well, these cookies crumbled all right. On the outside, our marriages looked pretty good but the real stuffing showed up when lifelong promises were tossed aside, fell and splattered. After kicking around the pieces through therapy, self-help books and Anything Anonymous meetings, Sis, I think I have the answer. Those Great Depression boys are the best.

Our parents talked often of The Depression. Hard Times was the hub of their adolescent lives and the spokes from that era radiated into their futures. We heard stories of hard work, no work, no food, big fear. It seemed grimy. The Dirty Thirties. Families struggled to survive – together. Did my relationship-sensitive ears hear through the bleakest days of this century there was commitment?

But as my Dad would say, "Things could be worse."

At that time, he did have it worse. Orphaned in the middle of The Depression, he later lucked out to marry my mom who held the same belief in family covenant. They survived The Depression, never quite shaking off the residue, causing them to cling to Family and Faith. Strong ethics helped assuage their new Gripes of Wrath: illness, clamoring kids, penniless days.

So maybe I have been going through this husband-hunting thing all wrong. I could run a personal ad looking for some down-trodden war refugee who escaped famine, floods, a POW camp, hungry for hearth and home. Beaten down from survival uncertainties, he would be content to have me clang a tin cup along the boards to announce dinnertime and serve the man some gruel. Add a warm bath and he would think he was in heaven. Repeat after me, "I will learn commitment."

16th century George Herbert spouted, "One Father is more than 100 school masters." Think of the mathematical ramifications the impact this father-school master’s talks had on us through the decades. We girls listened. It’s been challenging for us to pursue relationships without testing and grading each man against our standards without lowering the curve. So when I gnash my teeth in frustration over the men I meet who aren’t strong, smart or in any way committed to family, I just blame my Dad.

5 Comments

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Comment by Neka

June 28, 2006 @ 3:15 am

First off, if this post doesn’t post; I think it would be because my opinion of the judges’ choice as a first place winner isn’t justifiable in this standing. I liked the 2nd place winner’s story far better. Although it won 1st place, as it is a good story; I just think there is nothing ‘romantic’ or really sustaining about the story. What is the ‘main’ point and where is it reemphasized? Where is the TRUE reality in what to look for? Who is going to ‘really’ find a “Great Depression” guy? Do I even want one? Because if they are trapped in how ‘hard’ it was back then (when I already have parents shoving that down my throat) then who can really be optimistic about the future and prosperity when it hits? They would make you feel so guilty for having it better! It lacks reality. You shouldn’t have to be ‘poor’ to bond or have to have had to go through anything to bond. The story lacks anything expressive of what commitment is. It has absolutely no ‘explicit’ description of what qualities one should have. On the other hand, the 2nd place winner’s story does. She shows and demonstrates ‘patience’…..don’t just rule out on the first date, she shows ‘unselfishness’ ….getting out of ‘your’ norm to see the other side while ALSO exposing someone who is ‘willing’ which is another quality synonymous with ‘agreeableness’ and she also showed ‘observation’….letting her observation of his ‘actions’ rather than words confirm the love her ‘beloved Lloyd’ had for her. The most important thing is she demonstrated that it takes ‘time’ to get to know someone and when ‘time’ is taken out, demonstrations should be ‘progressive’….I saw ‘progress’ over the timespan. She mentioned ‘growth’ that came out of ‘patience’ and a big hint is that maybe a previously ‘divorced’ man is a far better man having learned to have to be ‘willing’ to know it’s just not all about him, perhaps.

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Comment by Susan

June 28, 2006 @ 3:39 am

I loved the first story. It was like sitting down with my grandma again who passed away five years ago! And my dad is so like that too. I wish there was a guy out there like him. Maybe that is why I am still single?

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Comment by Catherine

June 28, 2006 @ 1:49 pm

I can relate, my sister and I also have the same bond of not having good luck with men…we call it a “curse” though. I loved your essay, it’s original, not the same blah, blah, blah stories that you get tired of reading.

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Comment by Lynn

July 1, 2006 @ 9:16 am

I’m not buying that her father was such a gift. In my personal experience and through years of therapy, self help books and just observing people and relationships. When a woman has a loving, supportive, good role model as a father they have high self esteem and respect for themselves so they DO pick out good men. How a woman relates to a man, how she expects to be treated and being able to choose good men depends on their relationship with their father. I don’t understand how if her father was “all that” she and her sister both would chose lousy men. Don’t make any sense – sorry… doesn’t get my vote.

Comment by walli

August 10, 2006 @ 6:22 am

I think the author is right: for those of us whose fathers grew up in the Depression years, today’s men can’t compare.

What I mean is this: my dad, a retired soldier, died last fall. He was 80 years old and had bravely struggled with cancer for the last seven years of his life. And yet, when you asked him how he was, he unfailingly answered, “I’m all right.”

Even though I know he and my mom endured more than a few years of misery, it would never have occurred to my dad to get a divorce. You see, he knew what commitment meant. And so did my mom. They toughed it out, together.

My dad’s strong sense of duty meant my mom was provided for and so was I. Even as he lay dying in his hospital bed (just hours before we got him home) his last conversations revolved around making sure the bills were paid and checks were written. He also wanted to make sure I finished law school! (And I’m in my 50s!)

When I look at my dad, compared to say, my ex-husband, I see a man, my father, who never gave up. He never gave up on his marriage or on life. He didn’t run away when times got bad. He didn’t leave my mom even though she’s not the easiest person to get along with. (Though my dad could be difficult too.)

The point is, that generation is aptly called “The Greatest Generation” precisely because so many of them epitomize the best parts of humanity: diginity, sacrifice, commitment, patience and endurance.

When Noel says she hasn’t found men like her father, and that she’s been unlucky, it may be precisely because she had such a good role model in her dad and few men today can live up to that.

I just hope there are some men out there of my generation that can live up to the strength and commitment my dad had. And I hope to be worthy of him when he does come along.

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