Reminder of struggle to be a dad
You’re getting married on Monday, my son. You won’t remember the day I first saw you, but I’ll never forget it as long as I live. It was the Thursday before Francois Pienaar and Kitch Christie’s Transvaal team won the Super 10 for the first time.
I walked with you from the theatre to a room where they counted your fingers and toes before they bathed and dressed you and put you in my arms.
You looked at me with bright, uncertain eyes. I was just as unsure of myself.
“Hello,” I said. And then, with panic in my heart, I added: “I am your father.
“Not that I have the foggiest idea how to be a father.”
Years later, I took you to an auction where I bought an ugly wooden donkey.
I thought I was bidding on a beautiful, handmade rocking horse, but I only realised my mistake when you laughed at me. It was cracked and the pink paint was flaking, but I still have it.
It reminds me of my struggle to be a dad.
Sometimes, I managed to be a gorgeous rocking horse. But there were times when I felt like an unsightly auction donkey.
“Up to now it was easy,” I told my dad two days after your birth. “But I think the big challenge is still ahead. I don’t know how to be a father.”
I expected him to tell me I’ll have to learn quickly. But he didn’t.
My father was a wise old man and sometimes it was impossible to predict what he wanted to say.
He looked at me for a long time, and then he spoke: “I also didn’t know when you were born. I still don’t know.”
I think he grappled with his own ugly auction donkeys at times.
I did – for almost 29 years now. But it was so worth my while.
When I walked you to nursery school one day, I told you that you were perfect.
“I don’t want you to grow up. Life would be too alone without you.”
Then I walked home all alone. You didn’t listen. On Monday you will become a husband. Which is often the first step to becoming a father.
And I think you will be a great one. I wish you all the luck.
And all the ugly auction donkeys life can throw at you.