Question of the Day | 06/13/2008 12:00 am
What is the best advice your dad ever gave you?

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Dad,
Thanks for:
Making a great place to grow up in and teaching me:
To have money in my pocket so that I am not dependent on someone I don’t want to be dependent on.
You don’t have to answer questions you don’t want to, but if you do, you must tell the truth.
Have integrity
Mix a little compost in to break up the soil
Use two types of beans when you make chili
Don’t believe anyone who tells you you’re not intelligent
and my favorite, because it was so typically him:
Don’t let the bastards get you down, they are not worth it.
Ahhhhhhhhh! Frannie, the old, ‘Non Illegitimati Carborundum.’ Thanks! I forgot all about that. My step-father taught me that one too.
C A Rose
They were of a generation weren’t they? One time my son called me from Iraq really troubled about all that was happening and the political situation all around him, and I told him what his grandpa told me. He repeated it in latin.
“Yeah, all right.” My dad had a sign in his office behind his desk.
I envy you all the wonderful relationships that you had with your fathers. You were luckier than you know.
The only two things I remember my father saying directly to me are: at 12yrs old “Beauty is only skin deep and boy do you need skinning” and at 36yrs old bearing a child out of wedlock “I am glad your mother is not here to see this, but I love you for not having an abortion”. Dad never was a great one for guidance. But he wasn’t around enough when I was growing up to do too much damage.
I wonder if having a strong father image has helped you women achieve your successes? Do some of us succeed because of our fathers and others inspite of them? What would Freud say about all this - lol?
Maggie,
I love your comment about what Freud would say lol. I think despite the reason or cause of the success of a woman Freud would say it was all because of penis envy. By success I do not mean what he meant which was that women should stay home and have boy babies because that was the closest she was going to get to having a penis. He was quite an interesting guy.
Freud is the father of Psychology and he was not a very good father. Between the cocaine addiction and his addiction to his penis he probably was not one that we should use for advice lmao.
Maggi, great question. My sister and I remember our dad very differently. So is it nurture or nature? I really would like an answer to that one.
I think it’s pretty well established that both nature and nurture play significant roles with genetics playing a larger role than previously thought. You and your sister are individuals therefore you related to your father in different ways just as he related to both of you differently.
Dear Maggi,
I hope you don’t mind that I quoted you on another thread… your comment last week regarding an analogy of resisting the temptation to respond to a rather misogynistic poster and a dieter to a chocolate sundae was so perfect.
You continue to add such wit to this place.
I don’t remember my father very well. He was strict, quick to anger, and his idea of discipline was to sit me down on the couch and tell me how much I had disappointed him.
I hated that couch.
I am the youngest child of three daughters and two sons. My brothers had their lives planned out by him. He believed an education was wasted on girls because they would just get married, have children and make a home.
I grew up resenting his view of girls. I grew up resenting his idea of how I disappointed him. I grew up not wanting children or a family or a home to “make.” I grew up with none of those things and without him, and yet I am still happy.
So, what is the best advice he ever gave me? Never, ever, think like him.
And aren’t you the lucky one to realize father doesn’t always “know best”–––what a plucky one you are. I salute you!
So, some learned by example, and you, by what not to do. What is important is that you are happy.
My father was killed when I was 2 mos old. My mother married my step-father when I was 2 yrs old. The thing that stands out the most for me is if you borrow money you ALWAYS pay it back with interest. The first time I had to borrow money from my parents Dad made me sign a promissory note and charged me 2% below prime interest. He never let me off the hook, even though he could have. Looking back, it made me more responsible . My problem was that they were the only ones I was responsible to. I was lousey handling my own money. Lately, I hear stories about my mom’s friends who have loaned their life savings to their children over the years and never got a penny back. They are the ones that are struggling in their retirement years and are doing without. It makes me sad. Don’t get me wrong, I was a wild child of the 60’s and did more wrong than good. When it came to money and family though, I sure learned there were consequences. Thanks to my step-father’s good planning my mom is self-sufficient. Hmmmmm…did I mention I am an only child and live with my mother? I’m sure glad I payed back those loans!
C A
My parents loaned me money and I had to pay it back. They didn’t charge interest, but they made me pay it back. It was one of the best lessons for me as a young woman. It made me not want to get into debt. I did at times, but not to a great extent and always paid it back. Slowly, but surely. We have tried to teach our sons that, but they just do their money they way they want to and have big lessons at the end. I don’t think I will lend them large sums of money when they are older.

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