"Now I know..."
Last week while Emma and I were in Anaconda, we ventured up to the cemetery like we always do whenever we are in town. As is the custom, Emma wandered down to find "Gramma and Grampa". But this time, as she knelt down, she could actually read the names. After she ran her fingers over the letters and sounded out the names, she looked up at me, her eyes big and welling with tears and said, "Now I know why we come here Dad. Now I know." She got up, came over to me and gave me a big hug. Then, in a voice that had an echo from both my parents she said, "But I'm not sad, 'cuz they really aren't here are they? They are not gone because we keep them alive in our hearts." Then she skipped off, picking up flowers that had blown away from their graves and replacing them "back where they belong."
Mom and Dad always told me you don't really know what love feels like until you have kids of your own. I am reminded daily how right they were.
Or as Emma said, "Now I know...."
Mom and Dad always told me you don't really know what love feels like until you have kids of your own. I am reminded daily how right they were.
Or as Emma said, "Now I know...."
1 Comments:
My name is Mike Harrington, my father was raised in Anaconda, school years were the 1920's and high school in the 1930's, then him and his brothers moved away; my dad Jim use to take me to Anaconda to visit every summer when I was a teenager; we visited a Matt Softich and Pete Finnigan who my dad grew up with them; I don't know if this could be the same Matt or not; just curious about my dad's freinds. Matt was an expert fly fisherman, we went fishing with him alot; he had a wife and children and lived in a 2 story house. Age would be in the late 80's now,like my dad. My dad passed away several years ago, the last to pass away of the four Harrington brothers from Anaconda. A large Irish Catholic family.
By Anonymous, at 1:05 PM
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