The Best Gifts aren't Wrapped!

in The Ink Welllast year

I was spoiled rotten until about the age of eight. My mom only appeared here and there in my life, so my dad made up for that by conveying the awesomeness of ten parents! We were best buddies; we hiked a lot, went to museums, talked about life. I remember having serious conversations as young as five with him, covering topics like God and the afterlife.

One thing my father always told me that he knew without a doubt, was that there were things he just didn't know!

I was super religious when I was five, and my dad had nothing to do with that oddly enough. There was no adult influence, we didn't go to church together. I just really liked the teachings of the bible. I enjoyed the topics Christian services covered.


His only contribution to this, that I can recall, came when I asked him a serious question one day. "Dad, is there a God?" I asked, and he looked at me for some time before answering. There was a smile in his eyes as he chose his words, "What do you think, Tiger?" he replied.

We talked for a time after that, and he went on to tell me that he had a personal way of connecting to what he understood as God. That he preferred to pray alone. Looking back, I don't think I knew much about my father's spirituality that I could verbalize, until I was much older.

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Photo by Big_Heart

He let me make my own choices, I'm not sure that he would do it again if he could, though! I made many interesting selections in life, and a good deal of them got me in trouble. Church of course, wasn't one of those. I enjoyed going alone until I was about 10, and then I stopped. That is an entirely different story. I bring up my religious nature, because it's important in this next bit.

My father loves to tell an embarrassing story about me. We were visiting my grandmother in California around my 5th birthday, and she brought us to her Sunday service to meet her congregation. It was an outdoor service, and there was also some kind of festival going on, so a massive crowd consumed us.


The preacher spoke on a stage with everyone gathered around, using a microphone to reach each ear. As he concluded his sermon, he invited folks to testify. My dad tried to catch me; he really did. I sprinted full speed to the stage impervious to his attempts, however. He was left at its edge, breathless and unable to intervene now.

A few hundred people listened to me talk about God that day, although I have no recollection of what I said. I guess I've always been like that. I'm incredibly shy until passion strikes me, then fear is no longer real. My poor father. He once told me that he thinks the only reason I'm still alive is that I have some fears, otherwise I'd find my death pretty swiftly.

I don't necessarily disagree.

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Photo by Ma_Frank

I wasn't exactly pious, I was still a child.

My dad always did his best to give me a fantastic holiday season each winter; being so young, I only vaguely remember it all though. One Christmas does stand out in my memory, however. I was so excited to open gifts, someone had brought me a giant present, and I had been eyeing it all night.

When the time came, and I began to tear the paper from the highlight of my evening, my heart sank. It was a beautiful dollhouse. What was my problem? Well, I had this same dollhouse at home already. I wish I could go back in time, and laugh at myself as I cried about that.


How incredibly privileged and awful of me! I had no idea that a dollhouse was an expensive and extremely thoughtful gift, let alone a pain in the rear to wrap! I just thought about me. I was pulled aside and given a talk about gratitude, reminded that people were more important than things.

My dad rarely yelled, and when he did it was the most terrifying thing in the universe to me. On this occasion, like most others, he just talked to me. I always had this idea that our talks were a tactical opportunity for me to get out of trouble. It sometimes felt like a cordial battle of words. I'm sure he was aware, and fed into the notion; what a great way to get a kid to really listen!

My dad planted a seed in my mind, and I think it is the greatest gift I've ever received.

He read the works of Tolkien to me as a child. When characters like Tom Bombadil appeared, he had a special voice. The songs of Ents were belted out in a deep and remorseful tone, he captured the timeless tiredness of a species that knows things flesh and blood will never understand so perfectly... His words were sharp for elves, and gruff for dwarves.

I always knew I could ask anything, and ask I did! I was very concerned with the balance of good and evil, maybe because I was already a massive dork. He gave me space to air out my ideas, and tried to help me along without setting parameters for me. There was just one thing he often asked of me.

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"Whatever you do in life, be a good person."

This was such a theme in my upbringing, that it came up again recently. I asked my father to give me a writing prompt, and what he gave me surprised me a bit.

You see, I've spent my fair share of days being trouble. I did a lot of positive things, but I also mixed in wild acts as many young people do. At times I was a scoundrel, very much the girl who cried about a dollhouse, all grown up.

I was selfish and reckless, worrying my dad in the worst way possible. I traveled around the country for a few years, and rarely called. What a (any expletive is fine here) I was!

He was proud of the things I was doing, but it hurt him to fret about my wellbeing. I just thought about me though, imagining that I was a hero or something. Gosh, I'm laughing! I didn't lose my cumbersome ego until I was in my late 20's. I thought quite a lot of myself!


So, I took it as a really good sign that I've rectified some of that, when my dad asked me to write a response to this:

"What does it mean to be a good and moral person in today's modern society? What are the things that define and inform this decision if we choose to make this a priority in our lives?"

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I don't feel that I am an authority on that at all, sorry pops! I do know that trying to continually learn has shaped my perspective in a way that is beneficial to my own morals.

Connecting with people who I normally wouldn't is a priority to me. Expanding my world view. This rock we live on is changing rapidly, and I believe that informing yourself is a vital step in having helpful compassion. Gathering enough knowledge to have opinions that weren't handed to you.

Really seeing one another is more important than ever before in the digital age, in my humble opinion. Many entities sow division amongst us, that is no longer a conspiracy theory, it's something you can spend an afternoon reading about on google. Google! Good grief.


It's widely available information that public perspective is manipulated, and the manipulators don't have benevolent intentions. I think Hive is a prime example of people waking up to that and saying, "Er, I think I'll opt out of this." to me, that's (among many things) a moral decision.

In modern times, I think it's key for those who care about the future to fight back. That may be keeping your wealth in non-fiat assets, refusing to participate in the growing surveillance of people, or just being nice! Kindness is such a bold act of resistance, a firm strike against suppression!

I was given the gift of information without motivation, and the space to do what I wanted with it. I can't think of many things we could use in the world more than that. Except maybe for more willingness to accept that the perspective we have, is just one piece of the larger picture.


Loving each other is a gift that multiplies.
I can't tell anyone how to be a moral person in these odd times,
but I can say that in my experience, magic springs forth when you open your mind.
The best gifts I ever received were the seed of curiosity, and the sunshine of acceptance.
I feel my thoughts on that are the best answer to both my father's questions,
and The Ink Well's prompt for this week, gift.

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Kindness is such a bold act of resistance, a firm strike against suppression!

Always!!

I think your Dad and I would get along wonderfully :D

Love YOU!!

Love YOU 🤗 Maybe someday you'll be out my way, then we can all have dinner! You'd get a kick out of him for sure 😁

Interesting story, thanks for sharing.

Whatever you do in life, be a good person.

That's right.

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Amazing story great you had a good relationship with your dad growing up my friend sorry your mother was not there for you more must of been hard.
Your dad did you a solid allowing you to discover your own path in life.
Have a blessed and wonderful day
@grindan

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Thank you very much for your kind words, and the curation! I was indeed lucky to have one parent that was invested in my mental and spiritual development 💕😁 !LUV !PIZZA

I second what Ben said @grindan! Thank you so much for sharing this! So beautiful! 😁 🙏 💚 ✨ 🤙



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This is the second time that one of your wonderful posts brought tears to my eyes! I also laughed and gave a few knowing nods, as well! I could say so many things that came up as I was reading.

Being shy until passion strikes. I've always been that way too! The conspiracy realist in me loved what you had to say about those pulling the strings, who do not have our best interest in mind. Yes, brilliant!

I've never had children, though I've helped take care of and raise many children over my life (I still am in my jungle community), so I experienced your stories of your wonderful father from two perspectives - remembering my own childhood, and remembering when I was in similar positions to your dad's.

Being a good human. That's such an important one. Your dad is definitely that! It's so beautiful that he was there for you in the way that he was growing up, and still is.

Thank you again for touching my heart with your words @grindan! 😁 🙏 💚 ✨ 🤙

So many hugs to you for this fantastic reply, thank you for sharing your experience with me! 😁🤗

Conspiracy realist, I like that! What a great term for those who seek truth 😍

I can imagine living in a jungle community is wonderful, I smile thinking of community involvement in the raising of children! That is the perfect way to do it in my book, "It takes a village" is super true from my pov!

I'm so grateful to you for making me smile with this great comment 💚!LUV

Your reply is so beautiful that I barely know how to respond! It was truly my deep honor, pleasure, and privilege, to both read your sweet post and to share my experiences and perspective with you!

I've used that term, 'conspiracy realist', for a few years now, as I've found it to be quite apt and appropriate. I'm happy that you dig it, and yes, it is all about truth!

I'm so grately to be able to live where and how I do! I love my life! Having community involvement in raising and helping with children is mutually beneficial all around, yes!

I'm really grateful that my comment touched you in a meaningful way, and that it made you smile! That makes my heart very happy! Thank you for sharing this sweet moment of heart connection! 😁 🙏 💚 ✨ 🤙

The preacher spoke on a stage with everyone gathered around, using a microphone to reach each ear. As he concluded his sermon, he invited folks to testify. My dad tried to catch me; he really did. I sprinted full speed to the stage impervious to his attempts, however. He was left at its edge, breathless and unable to intervene now.

I can see this scenario in my mind's eye perfectly, although if it was my little girl, I wouldn't be running up to intervene... until she said something completely humiliating to the entire crowd!

Children are naturally moral absolutists, but as we get older it's easy to slip into moral relativism. By the time we have children, the contrast can be very sharp. On one hand, parents want to prepare their children for what they believe is inevitable, a cynical view of the world, but in their hearts, they know they will be raising cynical children, with a changing and ever-evolving view of right and wrong. Parents are afraid to be moral absolutists, thinking it's too strict and authoritative, but the reality is that it preserves that precious spark in children, who see right and wrong in an easier light, without having to imagine all the grays that modern society tries to mandate.

I am so happy to read your very fond remembrances of your father, I am sure he loves you very much.

Interesting story, your dad really did the best for you.
And it's so sweet you appreciate his love and care.

Thank you very much for your comment 😁

You are welcome dear

I don't think your reaction to getting a doll house exactly like the one you had was strange or spoiled at all. Adults keep building up children's expectations - you'll get the best presents ever, it'll be such a nice holiday, you'll love this food if you only try it - that of course kids get disappointed and feel like promises were broken all the time.

My dad always did his best to give me a fantastic holiday season each winter.

That's a father's treat and it is always special

We’re a product of our influences; that much is a fact. That you had an intelligent, responsible and caring guiding hand is evident in your response to the trials that affected you. You passed with flying colors, despite the setbacks, despite the distractions. I do believe that your father is a very proud man.

This piece is so heartfelt, so emotive that we have to pause when we read it, just to assimilate, but that is the power of evocative writing. It bruises the mind. It makes us aware, it makes us care. Beautifully done!

Goodness Ink Well, you really touched me with this response! Thank you so much for this incredible reply! The feedback and encouragement the team gives me here truly inspires me to keep writing! When I read comments like this, it fills me with motivation! 😁❤️

Your father sounds amazing and it's clear you love him deeply. He read the Hobbit to you? Wow. That was the second book my son read at 6 after he read The Twits by Roald Dahl, excruciating slowly aloud on a car trip to Scotland. He WAS only six so I can forgive him.

I love the story of you rushing to the pulpit 😂😂😂

Don't feel too guilty about leaving home and spreading your wild wings. Many of us do, finding our own selves independent of our parents, and then we come back to them.

And yes, expanding our world view and being willing to understand others with compassion is essential l, especially in today's world more than ever.

Great piece of writing as always. Reblogged.

Haha! I love that you have your own memories of young ones and Tolkien 💕 I'm planning on getting the hobbit for my 4-year-old for Christmas, it may be a bit too soon, but I'll never know till I try! It's super impressive that your son could read the hobbit at age 6, he must have a really great mother 😉 !LUV

Thank you for the soothing words 😁, life is funny... Now that I understand the place of wildness in youth, I can transition into preparing for my own kids to do the same to me 🤣

Thank you for this wonderful comment and the reblog my friend ❤️😁

What a beautiful, touching piece! You were fortunate to have such a wonderful mentor.
With regard to fighting back, we need to realize that unifying against those who would suppress us doesn't necessitate us agreeing on everything. None of us has all the pieces of the puzzle.

Thank you very much 😁💚!

And gosh, how well said! Focusing only on what we do not agree on, only benefits the power structure. People who are united are a great threat to any sort of suppression! Someone doesn't have to agree with us to be our ally, I wish more people felt like that. !LUV !PIZZA

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Thank you very, very much @penderis 😁🤗

My goodness lovely essay. I hope my children will attribute some of their goodness to me and mine.

I love that he read Tolkien to you. He is one of my most favorite authors. I read a bit of it to my children too, although none of them developed the love of Middle Earth that I have.

Really enjoyed your post!

I'm sure that they will, I can only imagine that you are an incredible mother after reading your post the other day!

It's beautiful to me that you also shared your love of quality fantasy with your children, even if it didn't turn into a personal passion for them. I'm convinced that all time spent reading to children is magic, at least it feels that way when I read to mine 😁!

Thank you for this great comment!

What a beautiful relationship you have with your father, as a solo parent, I often think if I am enough. Your words warmed my heart. Thank you for sharing. And yes to taking the time to explore and grow, to discovering who we are xxxx

A friend one told me, "The fact that your worry about being a good mother is proof that you are one, bad mothers don't worry if they are enough." that helped me so much!

I hope it soothes your heart too, I'm not sure any of us really feel "enough"... I can imagine that parenting alone really amplifies this feeling, I know I watched my father struggle with it a lot. Sometimes he will apologize to me as an adult for not doing XYZ, and I never want to hear a word of it! He did great all on his own, and now that I have kids of my own, I do not envy that journey!

Be kind to yourself and be proud! From what I've seen you are a warrior woman who is raising her children in a glorious way. You're one of my heroes for sure 😁❤️ Thank you for your awesome response!

A very emotional story. I am one of those who think that a wonderful story comes from the deepest feelings of the human being.
The words manage to move the reader. Thank you for sharing a beautiful text on this day.
Goodnight!

Shucks, thank you so much for this comment 😁

Bet it was like on that show 'Kids Say the Darndest Things'

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You already know me well 🤣 it sure was! !LOLZ !PIZZA

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A heartwarming story @grindan . You sound like you were a rascal as a child😂😂
Maybe one of your kids would carry on the attitude😂😂

I had downloaded the snowflake divider the first time I saw it on the post😂😂😂✨

Oh Seki, LET ME TELL YA! My kids are absolutely carbon copies of me, and I am in a lot of trouble! 😂🤣

I'm so glad I'm not the only one who saw the snowflake and said, "I need that!" lol! Thanks for this awesome comment 😁🤗

No problem grindan 😂😂❤️

Your father sounds an amazing man @grindan, and I truly believe you've found the secret to life when you say:

Loving each other is a gift that multiplies.

I only we could all start living and loving that way, this world would be a better place!

Beautiful blog💖

I sure wish we would too Lizelle... until then, I will dream and keep putting my bit of weight behind the idea! Maybe we will change things in that way yet! 😁🤗 Thank you for this splendid comment !PIZZA

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Hello @grindan. I read with great pleasure everything you shared with us. I found your father wonderful, because he gave you tools for you to use in your own way, and according to your life.

Loving each other is a gift that multiplies.
I can't tell anyone how to be a moral person in these odd times,
but I can say that in my experience, magic springs forth when you open your mind.
The best gifts I ever received were the seed of curiosity, and the sunshine of acceptance.

These words are very beautiful
Greetings and blessings 🌷

Thank you for commenting, it makes me happy to hear that you enjoyed my story😁💚 Blessings to you as well 🤗

Thanks for sharing your experience with us!
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There was a smile in his eyes as he chose his words, "What do you think, Tiger?" he replied.

🖕

He sounds like an awesome parent. And now I know more about how you became so awesome and wise as well. 💗

Also... beautiful you...

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Quite excellent and clearly narrated. The very beginning captivated me and I smiled. Then I felt moved, then I felt ... I don't know, in any case a deep interest in what you reveal here. The relationship with your father made me gulp, I experienced similar things as the mother of my son, the questions about "God", the origin of the earth and so on.

I don't think you have been too ungrateful at any time and the dangerous aspects of your life are what make it worth living for me, without this contrast we wouldn't know contemplation, silence. We once fished people in distress out of the Mediterranean and I myself was in distress as a teenager and we were rescued.

So when I read that your father had read Tolkien to you, well that was it for me. See me with a big smile, because just now I hit publish on my post and Tolkien is in it. HaHa! Quite a funny coincidence as we followed the same prompt.

There is so much you bring up, I think I will have to read it a second time. I like your answer that you don't know what it means to be good. My opinion is that it is best to keep quiet about it. You can be good, but you don't need to talk about it.

Thank you for this amazing comment, I rushed over to read your story before replying, because I was so excited that your tale tied into Tolkien books too!

You are a remarkable writer; I greatly appreciate you taking the time to connect here 💚 !PIZZA

Thanks for the compliment, you did a remarkable writing yourself.

There's so much in this one excellent post! I feel as satisfied as if I had just read a 20 page short story. You led me in various directions and I enjoyed the ride! I see by reading the the comments that we're all in agreement here. :)


Now I'm thinking of your dad's question. I think in today's modern society, one thing that sets it apart is the reach of our words. Long ago what you said affected your 100 person tribe but now it could potentially effect billions. Whether we're talking to one person or posting to the world, we have an opportunity to improve the listener's mood. And if we can't find something nice to say, perhaps we shouldn't say anything at all. That funny put down might get a chuckle from some but ding the psyche of many more.

Your 5 year old self might appreciate Ephesians 4:29

Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen.

I think being moral is doing something good rather than bad to another sentient creature. The fact that we're so interconnected informs my decision to be moral in this way as each act of communication is so potentially amplified by others seeing and possibly sharing it.

And of course this ties in with the fact that we're all writing things here on a site that anyone anywhere can access at potentially any time in the future as well, since there's no way to erase anything put on this blockchain. It's good that so many of us are being moral in our writings here. Let's spread talk that might benefit our listeners!

Thanks for the meaningful post which inspired my way-too-verbose reply! :)

Not too verbose at all! I smiled while I read this response, you are fantastic 😁!!

I think being moral is doing something good rather than bad to another sentient creature. The fact that we're so interconnected informs my decision to be moral in this way as each act of communication is so potentially amplified by others seeing and possibly sharing it.

This!! The awareness that we are all interconnected, that our actions affect others... it is a moral decision to add as much good to this collective as possible. That can take so many forms!

I celebrate that the value in what you said here can be interpreted in a multitude of ways! Wonderful bible quote as well, not one I've heard quoted before! Thank you so much for taking the time to share your vibrant point of view with me Kenny 🤗 !LUV !PIZZA


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I Am told fathers do have a special bond with their daughters, I can see you and your dad have a unique bond. It is nice to see him allow you to make your own choices right from a child.

'm incredibly shy until passion strikes me, then fear is no longer real.

Our passion brings out a side of us we don't know exist.Dad is such an amazing man and he raised a fearless and amazing daughter😁😁

Helo friend, I think you had a great relationship with your dad.
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He gave me space to air out my ideas, and tried to help me along without setting parameters for me

I think this is one of the best thing a parent can do for their kids, as this will build their trust, creativity and increase their level of confidence.