Dear Eilis,
Last night, sitting in the passenger’s seat of my best friend’s car, parked halfway inside my driveway, I wrestled with the idea of losing a father.
I don’t know how we ended up at that table, hammering hope into regret, but I think I know where it began.
At the tail end of 2003, when funerals were for the movies. When, six months before, a motorcycle accident was the closest some of us had come to saying goodbye. Back then I learned to hate the number 13.
So when, that same year, I spent the 13th of December learning that the world did, in fact, keep rotating on its axis while sixty or seventy preteen girls sniffled and sobbed on either side of me, I started toying with that idea of losing a father. A fourth father, perhaps, if I counted them right.
The Father I read about in books.
The man who named me. Who held me when I was just the length of his forearm. Who worried I’d never be bigger, grow stronger, if my mother didn’t write down every ounce of food I ate.
The man who held me and my sister to his chest on Sunday mornings as people filed out of wooden doors on either side of us, stumbling down red velvet stairs, whispering to Please Be Good For Your Parents This Week, OK?
And then this man. The one who taught me lessons every afternoon. Who looked after me long before he had a daughter of his own. Long before he never got the chance to hold her in his arms or look her in the eyes or dance at her wedding to Butterfly Kisses after Midnight Prayers to Father Nos. 1 & 3.
I have a feeling your father took the pieces of 1, 2, 3 & 4 and threaded them together. Piece by piece. Heartstring by heartstring.
And as you jump from one lily pad to the next, fumbling for your balance, I know it seems near impossible to land correctly without his hand stretched out to steady you. I know how it feels when you’ve never felt too good at this whole Life thing, this whole Change thing, this whole New thing, and he has always had your back. The perfect words when you fall on the floor.
And then, in a flash, he slides the cushion out from under your feet and whisks away to someplace else. Someplace that’s Gone far away.
I know it. So badly. Know the tears that last for hours as everyone says how wonderful he was, how it is such a shame to see him go so soon.
But I want you to know this: I believe in angels.
I see his eyes and his smile in the photos of his daughter sitting in a card from his mother, a woman who hung through pregnancy and grief all at the same time, just two weeks of We’re In This Together before his car smashed itself into the road and left her alone, holding out for the baby he left her to love.
He was my Father No. 4 for six years, the one I spent the most time with. The only one who never did the leaving. No, no, that was my job. Until, one day, it wasn’t. Until, one day, he didn’t show up for practice, to steady my balance on the wooden beam, to catch my flailing limbs when I smacked onto the ground.
Your dad is up there, hands on his knees, watching you from the sidelines of life. He’s in your smile and your eyes and the way that you carry yourself from this lily pad to the next. He is right here, right inside you, right where you can always keep him close.
And he’s not going anywhere. He’s left you with his words and his heart and his love. For you to take and spin into something wonderful, something he would have loved, with this next chapter in your book.
Carry him in your pocket. Unfold his words like roads on a map. Trace the outline of your smile and see his love in the corners of your eyes.
It is there. No matter where you position yourself on this Earth. He’s there.
Love,
Kaleigh
Note: Eilis lost her father two years ago. She’s graduating high school, jumping into college life, and needs your words. Want to write to her? You’ve got until June 5.
By the way, every month I send out a short + sweet newsletter brimming with cool finds related to the monthly theme. It'd be stellar if you subscribed. If it's not worthy, it doesn't go in the newsletter. That. Simple.


My Dad has always been in my life. He’s the kind of Dad that always gave me hugs – he’d scoop me up in his arms when I’d fallen. He’d come and rescue me when my car broke down (usually because I was trying to run it on fumes again!), he’d help me top up the oil or change the tyre. I remember one time I’d got stung by a bee at the School Fair and he took me to the First Aid Tent and made a joke about how it could be worse it could be my birthday – well I think the first aider misheard my Dad given that it wasn’t my birthday that day!!)
Even now when I’m 26, married and moved out his and Mum’s house I see him once or twice a week and he always gives me a big bear hug – even yesterday when it was getting to the point of being too hot to move.
My heart goes out to Eilis – I don’t know what it’s like to lose my Dad but I know what it’s like to loose someone I love (my grandma passed away in 2009). Since my Grandma went my Dad has been hugging us more and hanging out with us more to make sure we have plenty of time together because you never know when it’s going to end.
Another amazing letter Kaleigh – you’re fab!
Kaleigh, this is a beautiful piece, and once again you have me on the verge of tears. It is hard to think of any child without a father or mother. I hope Ellis is able to find the strength her father inspired as she transitions to college. What a beautiful, strongly written letter. If only everyone wrote letters the way you wrote this one!
Thanks! I tried to pour my heart into it. I can only imagine how she must feel. I’m mailing mine out hopefully tomorrow. If you feel like you want to, feel free to do the same. Details at the link at the end of my post on where to mail it.
Thanks Han! It sounds like your dad is pretty wonderful and loves you so much. I just moved out so I don’t see mine that often, but you are a lucky girl. I’m glad you shared your memories.
I had 19 wonderful years with my father, but it will never be enough. He was a great man, the most loving teddy-bear of a person. I was studying abroad when I got the most terrifying phone call of my life and had to rush home to bury my best friend, my dad. This piece made me tear up a little. There are so many wonderful little passages. You had a birth father and three stepfathers?
Kaleigh, this is eloquent and heartfelt. I’ll be writing my own graduation love letter to Eilias soon and yours inspired me.
Yay, I’m sure she’ll love it! Glad you enjoyed mine, too. I sometimes get way too invested in these letter requests.