The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

HOW FATHER’S FOOTWEAR CONNECTS GENERATION­S

A daughter’s grieving heart takes comfort from an unexpected source.

- By Nicki Salcedo

“When I was a kid, if someone gave you a pair of shoes you wore them even if they didn’t fit.”

My father was cryptic about his childhood, but he often repeated this phrase to me.

Normally people say, “If the shoe fits, wear it.” My dad’s saying had a different meaning.

My father talked a lot. He told stories, and even better, he enjoyed listening to other people’s stories. He liked people and life. But he rarely told stories about his own life. The details of his childhood and growing up in Jamaica without a dad came from my mother, who learned the stories from my grandmothe­r.

His childhood was strict. My grandmothe­r and her sisters raised him. He was smart. He worked hard. He was their joy. They weren’t rich, and they weren’t poor.

Eventually, he left Jamaica to attend Rutgers University in America.

I wonder about the hardships he faced in the U.S. in the 1950s and 1960s. He went to school in New Jersey. In the summers, he worked in New York City. There must have been struggles and injustice, but my father was a glass half-full kind of man. He blamed no one for the things he lacked and was grateful for the people who helped him through life. It wasn’t until I was older and he was gone, that I realized the complexiti­es of his life.

I should have asked my father more about his life. You never think to ask a talkative person to talk more.

I knew my dad for half of his life. When he died, I tried to imagine his life that I didn’t know. Being tormented for not having a father. Boarding a plane for America for the first time. Working hard when you had no idea how much more hard work was ahead.

After college, he returned to Jamaica where he met and married my mother. They had three children, my two sisters and me,

the youngest. He brought us to the United States when I was almost 2.

We moved to Stone Mountain in the summer of 1981, and we buried my father there 33 years later.

A bitter wind

My father died in 2013. For a long time after, I wore my grief like a shawl. Grief was something that haunted me. Grief was something I did not know how to shed. I wrote. I cried. I tried to find peace. I wrote. I cried. I tried to accept the pain. I wrote and wrote about trying to find happiness after grief. Happiness would occasional­ly appear like a butterfly, land in the palm of my hand for an instant, and then fly away. But my grief shawl stayed with me.

I remember standing in the cemetery on that icy November day. It was the Saturday after Thanksgivi­ng. The beautiful blue sky felt ominous. The wind blew open doors at the funeral home. The same wind also held the doors shut. There were angry spirits everywhere. Small stinging bits of dust blew against our faces and into our eyes. The chill in the air froze our expression­s and dried tears to our cheeks. Everything felt wrong and foreign. Our grief became a blustery pain.

It was the end of the year and his life, and the start of our favorite season. He would miss Christmas. Our New Year would begin without him. Thanksgivi­ng still loomed over us, but we had nothing to be thankful for.

No jellies allowed

I had a happy childhood. We weren’t rich, and we weren’t poor. We were immigrants, yes, but also middle-class Americans. We did very American things like watch the Atlanta Braves on TBS and go to the mall.

Shopping, particular­ly backto-school shopping, was a bit of an adventure in my family. Three girls to shop for. None of us wore the same size. My parents liked finding a good bargain, and they knew how to get a deal. We wore nice namebrand outfits, but usually on sale from a previous season.

When I was 12 years old, jelly shoes were in fashion. Sandals made of flexible plastic, jellies came in every color you could imagine and some were infused with glitter. I asked and asked for a pair of those shoes, but my parents refused.

I had no idea why. I thought price was the basis for our shopping choices.

“Please, Daddy. Jelly shoes are so cheap,” I pleaded with him.

“You can’t wear cheap shoes. They’ll ruin your feet,” he said. “When I was a kid, if someone gave you a pair of shoes you wore them even if they didn’t fit.”

Who cares about my feet! I thought. I wanted cute shoes.

But cheap shoes came with the threat of callouses and blisters, misshapen feet and toes. I was the only kid at school who knew the looming danger of corns and bunions.

Instead I got a pair of something sensible and more expensive. Nothing worth rememberin­g. Nothing trendy.

My parents gave me everything I ever needed and many things I wanted. When my father died, it was hard to pick one way to remember him. In truth, he was a kaleidosco­pe of people, good and bad. But when I think back on my life as his child, the worst thing he ever did was deny me was a pair of jelly shoes when I was 12 years old.

A bag of shoes

Getting rid of my father’s things started with my mother. After 48 years of marriage, she needed to remove the reminders of my dad. He was a man who wore a suit six days a week. Always Monday through Friday. Always on Sunday. There were nice shoes and belts and ties and hats, too. In death, he became a ghost of empty clothes.

I think of the lucky people who might be in possession of my father’s clothes. He had some beautiful shirts. They are gone. Most of the belts and ties are gone. We each kept a few things.

My sister has his suits. My husband has a button-down shirt with my father’s initials embroidere­d into the cuff. We have his winter coat and wool Ivy cap. At times, I put his hat on my desk at work.

This summer, my sister found a bag of my father’s shoes in her basement. She didn’t know what to do with them.

“I’ll take them,” I told her. At first it was a sentimenta­l gesture, this keeping. The passing of the shoes seemed like a ritual, but it wasn’t. It was happenstan­ce. I don’t know why we kept the shoes. Grief does not follow logic and the shoes were the one last piece of him that we could not give away.

I was glad to have them. As time passes, it’s harder to find my dad. He used to be a part of my life every day. Now he is gone from my life every day. Even now, I struggle to reconcile the memory of him and the loss of him. I want to keep the dead near me, but death at bay.

When my sister said she left the shoes at my house, I rushed home to get them. They were in a black garbage bag at my front door. The bag was dusty and covered in cobwebs. Inside the bag, the shoes were a jumbled mess. I feared seeing them would spike my grief, but the bag of shoes looked like a gift from my father, and I felt joy.

Filling his shoes

My son looks nothing like my father, but he has my father’s spirit. He is joyous and quiet. A few weeks shy of his 10th birthday, his shoe size is 8.5.

He didn’t think it morbid to dive into a bag of his grandfathe­r’s shoes. I pulled out a single pair and put them on to the floor. They were black dress shoes, wingtip Oxfords. I’d forgotten how much detail went into men’s shoes. We traced the pattern of tiny holes with our fingers and flipped the shoe over to see the soles. They were tan and worn. The Florsheim logo was still embossed on the bottom. The shoes were beautiful.

My son and I smiled at each other. Then he slipped them on. The shoes fit. It was like magic — another kind of Cinderella. He was another kind of Pinocchio. When my son stood up, my chest filled with elation and pain as the shoes came to life on his feet.

Dress shoes have thin laces. Much thinner than anything a 10-year-old boy would be used to. I watched him lace the shoes and offered to help. He didn’t need it. My son noticed that the leather gave off a slight smudge as he touched it. I explained the act of polishing shoes, a lost art form, and looked in the bag for my father’s supply of brushes and polish. None of it was there.

“I have the polish and brushes,” my husband shouted from the other room. “Your mom gave them to me to use. She didn’t want them to go to waste.” It made sense. Some things you keep.

On Sunday night, after two rounds of church, morning and evening, my father would return home to shine his shoes for the week. To go with his shoes my father had polish, brushes, cloths, and cedar shoe trees.

As a child, I learned to apply polish, and then buff and shine, using the cloth to get the shine close to the stitching. My father could get the brush to make a soft percussive sound on the shoes. I tried to replicate that, but my strength and speed never matched his.

A million memories came flooding back. My grief was losing him. My happiness was rememberin­g the small details about him. The polish. His shoes.

There were a dozen pairs of shoes in the bag. I explained the types to my son as I removed them from the bag.

“These are Oxfords. These are the dressiest shoes.”

“These are loafers. More casual, but still nice.”

“These are boat shoes. I think to wear on boats?” My son and I started laughing. Who knew a dead man’s shoes could make us so happy.

There was a good pair of hiking boots. A pair of running shoes. My son tried on every pair. Every pair fit.

“This one is a little too big,” he said.

“We’ll save them for you. You

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL TO THE AJC ?? Writer Nicki Salcedo of Decatur has struggled with her grief over the death of her father in 2013.
STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL TO THE AJC Writer Nicki Salcedo of Decatur has struggled with her grief over the death of her father in 2013.
 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER PHOTOS / SPECIAL TO THE AJC ?? Nicki and her 10-year-old son, Nolan, try on her father’s shoes, ranging from wingtip Oxfords to casual boat shoes.
STEVE SCHAEFER PHOTOS / SPECIAL TO THE AJC Nicki and her 10-year-old son, Nolan, try on her father’s shoes, ranging from wingtip Oxfords to casual boat shoes.
 ??  ?? Buying and sizing shoes were something of a ritual for Nicki’s father, who always insisted his children wear good-quality shoes.
Buying and sizing shoes were something of a ritual for Nicki’s father, who always insisted his children wear good-quality shoes.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Nicki’s father with his three daughters, Michelle (from left), Nicki and Racquel.
CONTRIBUTE­D Nicki’s father with his three daughters, Michelle (from left), Nicki and Racquel.

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