My father, Dale Jones, died at 79 on November 11, 2016. This is the eulogy I delivered at his funeral in Sturgis, South Dakota, today.
How impossible it
is to sum up a life lived just short of eighty years. I’m a historian, scholar, and theologian by trade, and to do the summing up while standing at a far remove of centuries is already
difficult. But when the person you’re describing is so newly gone and when
you’ve shared three-fourths of those eight decades with him, all perspective is
lost. It’s all just a bag of emotions, and almost any one of you would have
better insight than this son today.
But there are some
things I can say. The first is that my mom and dad have loved me every day of
my life. And later, when Dee entered the picture, the love from her direction
came not as a substitute but as a gracious addition. Whatever fault lines there
were in my dad’s inner existence, whatever led him to hunger and yearn for
something greater, for something beyond himself, for something universal and
whole and creative rather destructive, both the push and pull of it came from
love. It was both the source and the ultimate end that wrapped him and carried
him.
Second, for lots
of people in Sturgis, my dad was just that goofy guy on the scooter with a long
grabber in his hand and a basket full of empties he’d picked up on the side of
the road. But that was just his mild-mannered alter ego. He was really a
superhero in your midst. And his superpower was the ability to grab what was
cast-off, starting with those empties but expanding to dumpster treasures and
to actual people. Most of his adult life was written with a pen containing Serenity
Ink. It saw nothing and no one as trash. It saw hope in each encounter. And
when a bit of self-doubt kryptonite landed in his lap, he went to the curing
places that were those relationships: to Dee, of course, to me and my siblings, to his grandchildren, to those whom he and Dee called their adopted kids, to friends like Clay and
Mary Ellen, to people ranging from Australia to France, to whatever fellow
drunk working their program was nearby.
Finally, the
relationship my dad and I had was fraught. And there was plenty of baggage. And old friend had a similar relationship with his father, and earlier this week we
talked about the arc of that father-son relationship. The fraughtness of our
first twenty years, when we didn’t understand each other, and we kept missing the
real and true connection that was hurt by his alcoholism and lots of earlier
hurts he’d faced — that was on him. The next twenty years as he realized he was
powerless over alcohol and every other thing that life consists of, and as he
made a fearless and searching moral inventory and took action to correct things
where possible — these years are on me. I was angry, embarrassed, scornful, and
dismissive while he kept moving forward, trying his damnedest to be alive and
to figure out how to be a both a sober and a loving dad.
But the last
twenty years, give or take a few, have been years of joy and wonder. And that’s
not on either of us. That responsibility has had to come from outside us. He’d
say it was the universe exuding love. I’d probably point to a Judean preacher
from the first century who was crucified. Either way and whatever the source,
it came sneaking in to our relationship through you all, surrounding us with
your own love and care.
First and foremost, the burden of seeing my dad and me
renewed has been born by Dee for him and by Mary and Sam for me. But it can’t
be limited to them. My brother and sister (and his as well), his grandchildren,
my mom, this vast web of relationships we crawl around in – you’ve all meant
something to the tiny world that was me and my dad. But seeing you drawn together
to share our mourning is a sign that there is more to life than what happens
between a first breath in a maternity home and a last gasp on the floor of a
bedroom.
It’s that
inter-connectedness that my dad loved and relied on. It’s what he reveled in.
It’s the mercy that he bathed in. In spite of his death, it’s what remains when
all are ashes and dust. I learned that from my dad. And I yearn for that to
live on in my relationship with my own son, Sam, who is going to
read the prayer Saint Francis wrote back in the middle ages. This version is
the translation included in AA’s Twelve
Steps and Twelve Traditions. Francis himself would have been seen by his
contemporaries as the goofy guy in town, loving his animals, and searching for
life from God. His faith moved him to extend himself. And the words of his
prayer speak to the exact world my dad wanted to live in, and what he hoped
would be bound within the covers of the book of his life.
Lord, make
me a channel of thy peace —
That where
there is hatred, I may bring love,
That where
there is wrong, I may bring the spirit of forgiveness,
That where
there is discord, I may bring harmony,
That where
there is error, I may bring truth,
That where
there is doubt, I may bring faith,
That where
there are shadows, I may bring light,
That where
there is sadness, I may bring joy.
Lord, grant
that I may seek rather to comfort than to be comforted,
To understand,
than to be understood,
To love,
than to be loved.
For it is by
self-forgetting that one finds.
It is by
forgiving that one is forgiven.
It is by
dying that one awakens to eternal life. Amen
2 comments:
Ken, you have a gift - thanks for continually sharing it. I had known so much about your Dad but you encapsulated it beautifully. He must be so very proud and grateful. - Jon Christopherson
Ken,
That was so perfectly written. For me, it is an accurate description of how this whole world works.
My sincere condolences to you and all of your father's family and friends.
Love,
Tami Erickson
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