Shortly before he passed away, my father came to see me play the part of Schroeder in a community theatre production of You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown. It’s a night (and a lesson) I’ll never forget.
My Father Laughed at Me (and I loved it)
I can still see him sitting there beside my mother in the front row. His skin was pale. His frame was lean. He looked so tired and weak. Just months before, he’d been diagnosed with Leukemia, a thing that seemed intent on doing what it came to do in a quick and merciless manner.
But what I remember most about that night was the sound of his laughter. From the stage and all through the performance, I could hear him chuckling and giggling in a way I hadn’t heard him do in quite some time. It was the laugh I’d always loved, and on that night, it was the sweetest sound I’d ever heard.
It was, however, a fluke that I was even in the play. I hadn’t pursued the role, or any other role, or much of anything else I cared about since high school. Long ago, I’d put such things away in order to become practical.
Who I Used to Be
Yes, when I was a small boy, I made my first trip to a movie theatre, saw Tom Thumb, and insisted on reenacting it for a string of hapless babysitters.
Yes, after receiving a cassette recorder for my eighth Christmas, I used it to produce a series of little radio plays I wrote.
Yes, when I was in the fifth grade, I saw my first live play, went home, and immediately wrote my own, one my classmates and I performed for our Home and School Christmas program.
Yes, I went on to write dozens of sketches, stories, poems, and plays; become a member of my high school drama club; and even win a few awards.
But that was all just grade school and high school stuff. Life’s a ball and then you grow up. You get a degree. You get a job. You get real.
Who I Tried to Become
You see, I was going to be the first in my family to attend college and I took that pretty seriously. I wanted to make everyone proud. Especially my father.
I thought I couldn’t afford to waste my time on things I loved. They seemed so silly, trivial, and impractical. Sure, the university offered degrees in things like English and Theatre, but come on. I had to earn a living.
No one I knew made their living writing stories or poems or plays, and the town in which I was raised contained no actors or artists, at least not any that I knew of or that anyone paid attention to.
So I took stock of my more practical skills, like math. I’d heard somewhere (Okay, more like everywhere) that engineers made good money and were in high demand, and I headed in that direction.
I boxed up all the silly stuff, writing and acting and goofing about, and threw it in an attic somewhere. I shut the door. I moved on.
Getting Down, Down, Down to Business
And almost immediately, the sadness set in. The sadness became listlessness. The listlessness became depression. The depression became constant.
Unhappy with engineering, I tried computer science, another respectable and profitable career path. Same results. I tried accounting, did really well in my classes, and even received an additional scholarship. More sadness.
Every day, as I walked across campus, I’d glance sideways at the English building, but I’d already completed the required writing and literature courses, courses I loved but considered a mere distraction.
In those courses and and all the others in which I was given writing assignments, I’d hear the same thing. “You’re a very good writer, you know?” my professors would say, and they’d often point to my work as an example for my classmates.
But I wouldn’t listen. I was out to make my father proud, and to me that had nothing to do with the things I loved.
Moving On and Further Downward
I eventually settled on a marketing major in order to settle on something, anything, get the hell out of there, and get a job. Maybe then, I thought, I could find a way to prove I had something on the ball.
But the job world wasn’t much different. I worked hard, received a lot of praise and a few awards and promotions, but never felt at home. The depression only grew larger and darker, and just as I’d done in college, I drifted from one thing to another while feeling lost.
The Me My Family Never Knew
Somehow, in the midst of all that, I met Carol, fell in love, and got married. Together we produced and raised two great kids, Megan and Seth, who continue to blow my mind.
And yet, I still couldn’t shake the sorrow. I knew I was not the person I once was, and it struck me that the people in my home, the ones I loved the most, had no idea that such a person had ever even existed.
In fact, when a friend of mine paid a visit and showed some old video tapes of me acting and performing in skits and plays and amateur movies my friends and I had made, Carol looked at me as if she had no idea who she married. “I’ve never seen that side of you,” she said, “I love it.”
But I was still busy struggling and straining to be practical and failing miserably at it. The only practical thing I was succeeding at was feeling practically dead inside.
Saying Yes for a Change
Then came my father’s Leukemia. My attempts to make him proud, in the way I thought I should, weren’t really panning out, and the time to do so was slipping away. Life had not gone as planned.
I think that’s why I agreed to do the play. It reminded me of better days, days when my friends and I had fun, and it had been a long, long time since I’d allowed myself to do anything that sounded like fun.
My friend Jennifer had called to see if I’d be interested. The theatre group was shy one actor.
“Umm, a musical?” I asked.
“Uh-huh.” she said.
There were reasons to say no. I was in my thirties and it had been fifteen years or more since I’d done any acting. I’d never been in a musical. Whatever singing voice I might have once had (I actually sang in a few weddings when I was younger) had been ground down by the cigarettes I smoked to escape my restlessness.
And it was community theatre, something many people regarded as the K-mart of the performing arts and the last bastion of ridiculous, wannabe actors. We would be a bunch of goofy people having a goofy time doing a goofy thing.
“Okay.” I said.
It was a blast. The people involved in the production were smart, warm, supportive, and fun. The practices were an escape from my troubles and depression. I felt alive. I felt happy. I felt a lot like the person I used to be.
We did three performances. Friends came, Carol and the kids came, and on a Saturday night, my parents came. They all laughed, but no one laughed as hard as my father did.
My Father’s Delight
Oh, how he laughed, and I wasn’t the only one who noticed. Back stage, the others grinned and remarked how much he seemed to be enjoying himself.
Afterward, when it came time to go out and greet the audience, a few of the other cast members and I made our way to the front row. My dad was there, smiling like a big kid, working to rise from his seat. When he stood, he embraced me.
He shook his head, looked at us through watery eyes, and said, “I just want you to know you sure made an old man happy tonight. I haven’t laughed that hard in a very long time, and I really needed something to laugh about.”
My new friends and I had made an old man, my old man, happy, and we’d done it by doing something that made us happy.
What a Little Joy Can Do
I wondered how much happier I could have made him through the years if I had simply followed my heart and pursued the things I loved. I wondered how much joy I could bring to everyone I love, if I just did things that brought me joy too.
I don’t know if I always made my father proud, or if that even mattered. What I do know for certain, however, is that one night, a night when he and I both needed it most, I made him laugh, and that makes me proud.
That’s why you absolutely, positively have to share your gifts. And I’m not talking about the the respectable, admirable, or sensible ones. I’m talking about the ones that make you giddy, the ones that make you feel like you might be floating.
Yes, you too have something to give, something you love, something you enjoy, something that lights you up inside. Those are the gifts you have to share because you have a need to share them, and because there’s someone out there who has a need to receive them.
Don’t be a miser and hoard your gifts. Share them. The world is waiting.
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{ 39 comments… read them below or add one }
Beautiful, uplifting, moving, inspiring. Great story, Ken. I am so happy you decided to share your gifts.
Sandy
Sandy Dempsey´s last blog ..Three Things I Learned From Cirque du Soleil
Same to you, my friend.
Thanks so much for this reminder. It’s interesting how we sometimes need permission to share our gifts.
What a delightful story…. thank you!
Lisa´s last blog ..Creativity= counting your blessings.
Beautiful.
Heather Plett´s last blog ..Flat Madeline goes to Rome
Moving and inspiring – great post!! Thank you!
Sue
Great story
I’m really enjoying your blog, and this is another fab entry.
Mike Walters´s last blog ..How are you geeky?
Wow, Ken…that was really beautiful! I absolutely love this story! At the same time, I also believe that everything happens for a reason and that maybe, everything happened the way it was supposed to! You grew into your own and realized a lot about yourself in the journey! I hope that through all of this that you continued to do some acting long afterward
. I certainly have been learning a lot from you and it’s definitely making me re-evaluate my life and look at things a lot differently then I did before. Time to make some changes….reading your articles is making me more aware that I have to do something…anything…as long as it moves me in the right direction. We are here to teach one another…thanks for the lessons!
Poetry readings, I have found, are a nice intersection of writing and performing. I get to read what I write and make a connection with an audience. Thanks for all your support, Della.
Ken, this is just beautiful. I’m totally balling my eyes out. It’s so full of all the happy and all the sad, mixed in just the right way that makes it all so clear what’s really important…
Thank you for sharing *this* story and everything else you share so generously. Your father would be proud.
CathD´s last blog ..Martha Beck’s Top Tips on How to Unleash Your Genius
Thanks, Cath. I knew you’d like it.
Wow, Ken! What a beautiful and inspiring story! Thank you for sharing it with us. I can relate to so much of what you said, as I am sure so many others can. Thank you again!
Very nice, my eyes are welling up. And on the back of a piece of scratch paper, in front of me, I read “Each one should use whatever gift he has received to serve others”–1 Peter 4:10. when we embrace our gifts and share them, it really does brighten the world, doesn’t it?
Lovely verse, Tim. Thanks.
it is 12:33 a.m. in this part of the world. my day was spent staring at a project i am supposed to complete involving the task of combining and redesigning the workspace of about 200 people from different departments currently housed in three different floors to maximize efficiency and save on energy costs. i stared at that laptop screen for hours feeling miserable and i could not understand why. i am staring again at a computer screen — but now i understand. thank you.
What a beautiful compliment. Thank you.
Very nicely written. Of course, you have just released about 50 ballet dancers, firemen, and artists, aged 50 plus into the community college campuses. LOL. Follow your dreams and the money will follow. Be Blesed.
Tears in my eyes, and a smile on my lips
Wow, your college experience seems very similar to mine except I thought I should be a veterinarian and eventually settled on business management just to get out. Unfortunately, I was so unhappy with what I was studying that undiagnosed depression set in and I didn’t fare so well in classes I grew to hate. Somewhere along I decided that being creative was not important and “anybody could do it” so I dismissed it. I’m glad I am finally on the right track to write, paint, draw and sculpt to my heart’s content.
I’m also glad you’re on track. You were right about one thing. Anyone can be creative, but that’s no reason they shouldn’t be.
Thank you so much for sharing this story.
I also did the engineering thing; my father really pushed for it. (He wanted to be a civil engineer but never learned how to study well, and dropped out after 2 years of college. He’s also bossy and unempathetic, but I’ve learned to say no since then.) I initially thought I’d like it – computers are neat! – but by the last year, having been a co-op and been through most of the classes and finding it didn’t move me at all, I despaired of going to work full time.
Then in my last semester I found the branch of human factors that unites computer engineering and psychology, and things got a bit better. But I worked, and still work, with engineers who really do enjoy it, and I only get that glow rarely, when interacting with participants or giving presentations. I want a PhD and I want to teach at the college level. And poke people’s brains for money so that I can meet the publication requirements there. Meat computers. Organic black boxes. So much more interesting.
Meanwhile, I was finally diagnosed with major depression after resisting the idea of treatment for a good long time, with the help of a psychiatrist and psychologist who are equally incredible – it amazes me that I stumbled upon one and she was able to lead me to the other. And they went on the attack against the attitudes that made me doubt my writing, give up singing, and barely even try to draw since it stopped being a school activity.
It took a lot more than serendipity but I’m getting there too. I’m writing the first thing I’ve done that I’ve ever thought COULD be worthy of publication. After only two years of knitting, I amaze classmates who are still in the “I could never do that” mindset. I bellydance (like a baby giraffe, but getting better) after hating gym and swearing off all exercise but walking, let alone getting on a dance floor for anything but a feebly executed slow dance. I’ve drummed at the local Renaissance Festival (for my teacher’s bellydancing troupe, of course). I sewed my own harem pants for the costume I wore there…easier than most pants but still the first thing I ever sewed! I’m drawing knotwork again, painting it now, and building up confidence to draw things that don’t get done on graph paper.
And I have other plans, including grad school once I’ve beaten some last, troublesome effects of that depression – hard to imagine work and class in the same day when I can’t sleep the night before.
My father might not appreciate it, aside from that fact that one can make a bit of money in human factors, but people have flocked to my side in encouragement and those who were already there are pouring on the mutual encouragement. Mom, who’s always been an “I could never do that” person, has expressed an interest in learning how to knit – now we around her just need to convince her that it needn’t hinge on knowing how to make things she needs now. (Presents, my favorite, spread the happy. Sweaters, always useful. Socks!) And we’re all having a lot more fun than he ever seems to have had.
Sorry for writing a whole post, but the NaNoWriMo lovefests and repeated talk of being thankful (even though I don’t do anything for Thanksgiving) have got me in one of Those Moods. And if I can do it too, maybe someone who reads down into the comments will start breaking away from “I could never do that.”
Start it for fun. Learn new techniques for fun. Quality can come later, and will if you love it enough to learn just for fun.
No need to apologize. I loved it. And I’m now trying to imagine a giraffe belly dancing.
Ken,
Like everyone before me, I just had to say that this is wonderful. We are all blessed by your gifts and hope you “hear” our applause from near and far. We are loving the “true” you!
Lisa
This is so beautifully written and moving. As a career coach, I often see people who are in the wrong profession and have no joy but are afraid to risk starting over. My own father was such a person. I didn’t realize until years after his death how depressed he had been for much of his life. I didn’t start sharing my own gifts until past the age of 50, even though I have a graduate degree in English. Thank you so much for this post, especially at Thanksgiving!
Beautiful post! I used to work at a cancer center on the bone marrow transplant team and I have to say I was inspired to go out and live a more creative life as a result of working with people who were going through the most difficult time of their lives. That underlying sadness is impossible to shake if you aren’t doing what makes you happy. Thank you for writing a post that will hopefully wake others up to their own quiet despair and inspire them to take the leap into a happier life.
What an incredibly moving story. I will share this with our dear friends whose son is considering going to college as a theater major.
Wow – thank you so much for sharing that story. It will become a part of my presentation on “finding yourself”. For many of us, “ourselves” has been right there all along. It also made me stop and realize that my Mother would be so happy and proud of how I am living my life now. Happy Thanksgiving – I’m so grateful for friends like you who inspire me constantly.
Ken, your story is awesome. I can picture the smiles, the hugs, and the admiration you had for one another on that night. I was thinking that your story would make a good vignette (spelling?) where you explore in more detail how you and your father came “alive” together.
Such a beautiful and affecting story! Thank you!
I’m sorry for the long path you had to travel to arrive at this gem of a lesson, but I’m so glad that you’re sharing the story, and your advice.
My brother died suddenly a few years ago, and my mother a year later. While I understood this lesson before, their passing really drove this lesson home even more. I take seriously my time in what my brother called, “The Church of the Blue Dome.” Here’s more: http://budurl.com/cl6x
Again, thank you, so much!
A difficult story. A beautiful one.
Jan Richards´s last blog ..Enjoy the laughter the holidays bring
Outstanding post! You’re absolutely right about not only the need to share, but to share now! Too often people don’t try to live the lives they truly want to live until it’s almost too late… and sometimes it is too late. This is why it’s important to do it now!
Thank for letting us in and helping to remind us of this fact.
David @ Inexpensive Gifts for Men´s last blog ..Christmas Gifts for Men
What a beautiful, beautiful story, Ken. Thank you so very much for sharing it.
I’m in the same situation right now. I do like the business I have – but I went into it because I’m still a little scared to share my actual gifts.
We have so many excuses, don’t we. But none of them works any more when confronted with what really matters.

Charlotte´s last blog ..Tech Wednesdays – Black Friday Sale Edition
Thank you, Ken.

I think I have spent so much time running away from my voice that I have neglected to fully appreciate what a magical force it has been in my life.
Beautifully written.
Natalie The Tiny Soprano´s last blog ..Is Your Sacrifice Really Worth It?
I found this just in time. I’m on the verge of sharing but it’s scary stuff. You just reminded me that it’s fun. I needed that.
Thanks, thanks for the little glimpse of your dad and of you as well. I had a passion for science in high school and college, but my mother kept saying, “But you write so beautifully.” I discovered that I can be both a scientist and a writer, and it’s hard to say which one is more fun. I’m glad I didn’t have to choose. Best Thanksgiving to you all! Jane
Ken,
Thank you very much for sharing your wonderful story. I am both smiling and trying to hold back the tears at the same time. Your story really hit home. I would like to share my story (via the web address below) with you and others.
http://tinyurl.com/ygf4e73
Awesome post. Thanks Ken.
Mo
Ken,
What a completely beautiful story…and one I can relate to. It’s interesting – my father has just been diagnosed with leukemia, about three months ago. Right now, all is well – how long, though, is a bit uncertain. And I too went to college (first in my family) and chose engineering – in fact, I graduated in that. And then moved into the information technology field. In the last couple of years, I’ve had a stronger desire to pursue writing…and I’m closer…but still not fully there. Your story is both heartwarming and inspiring – thanks so much for sharing it here.
Lance´s last blog ..Sunday Thought For The Day
Hi Ken
My journey is similar to yours, i.e. going hell for leather in the wrong direction for a long time. Unfortunately my dad passed away before I came to my senses but my mum is still with us, and I make sure to share all my progress in my teaching and singing with her, no matter how tentative or seemingly small. Life is short, and the most sensible thing is to do what makes you happy while you’re here.
This is a beautiful story. Thanks for sharing.
Michele´s last blog ..Lenton promises…