June 12, 1993
Did I do OK?
By Tim Peeler
Son
Family Slide Show
NOTE: This is the full text of what I had intended to read at dad's funeral last week. Some of it was left out while speaking.
Our dad and I had a lot of long, meaningful talks in the 21 years since my mom died. I live in Raleigh, so I didn’t have the daily contact with him like my sister Donita did. Beth, my middle sister, and I are so thankful what she did for our dad. Both Beth and Donita had a different relationship with him than me. Long ago, I was OK with them being Daddy’s girls.
The two of us had the bond of sports, the bond of laughs, the bond of deep, shallow philosophy.
I remember the end of one conversation a few years back when he was feeling a little blue and a little sentimental. He asked me a stunning question: "Did I do OK?"
Our dad was born in a cabin with a dirt floor. He plowed the fields in this community with a mule. His family grew what they ate, and sometimes killed it. He watched his parents and aunts and uncles – he had 20 on one side of the family and 24 on the other – struggle every day of their lives. Sometimes, coming back on the bus from a high school or Legion baseball game, the team would stop for something to eat. He usually hid in the back of the bus while his teammates enjoyed store-bought food, except the few times Kermit Pendleton or Evan Shelton slipped him a dollar or two to get something. They often found some paid-work that didn't need to be done to help him out a little.
He raised his four brothers and sisters with our sweet grandmother when our grandfather was fighting the twin demons of alcohol and paranoid-schizophrenia after World World II. When the New Deal was passed, they asked for a little help, and they got $5 a week from social services – but only for a little while. Like my uncle Eddie said earlier today, they were dirt poor, but dad was the only one who actually knew it. He tried to make things better for them all.
Our dad wanted so badly to leave home and go to college, and he received a county scholarship to go to NC State. But he couldn’t afford the $15 housing deposit, literally the only money he needed to pay to get a full engineering degree.
He and our mom got married right after they graduated high school, at just about the ages of my kids are today. They struggled. He told me about the times when they ran out of food. But when he got paid at the end of the work week, they would splurge for $10 or $15 in groceries, dump them out on the floor of their rented house and have a feast of kings sprawled out in the living room. Usually, there were other members of the family there sharing it.
He paid his own way through Catawba Valley Technical
College, but basically taught himself how to be an engineer and makeshift
inventor. He made saw blades, taps, dies and other cutting tools.
Our dad designed the house where we were raised, even the addition he built with my brother-in-law Delaine while I was in college. He made it both a house and a home for all of us. My sister arrived before my parents were 20, and by the time my other sister came along they were adults. I was a surprise that came home with them from a six-month assignment in Louisville.
He worked for more than 40 years at the same company,Vermont American Manufacturing, sacrificing his family time and the tips of two fingers to the company. For years, when he was umpiring baseball games and refereeing basketball games to have a little extra money to take us skiing or maybe a rare trip to the beach, he endured the taunts of the crowd, asking him:
“Is that one-and-a-half strikes?”
“Who has two-and-a-quarter fouls?”
He was fair and firm in those games. Only once did I see him chased through the parking lot by a knife-wielding baserunner.
He also played ball into his 50s, finally giving it up when the game changed so much he didn’t like it, not because he felt like he couldn’t hit a line drive down the right field line or hit the corner of the plate as a pitcher. The only time he stopped trying to make a hook shot from the side porch on our driveway basketball goal was when he built the family room on top of our gravel court.
He took me to Lake Norman when I was really young, putting a bottle of formula in his tackle box. Our family spent many days on that lake together. Whether we ever got a bite was irrelevant. It was on the pier at that lake where he taught me the only lesson I needed about race relations.
Graduation day, 1988. |
Mom and dad made sure my sisters and me were able to do what we wanted after we graduating high school. He was never rich, but he provided us with access to education and helped each of us as we started homes and families of our own.
He so loved all of his grandchildren and great-grand babies.
He watched the uncut version of “Blazing Saddles” with them when they were far too young, laughing loudly like he had never seen it before every single time. I’m pretty sure they did a reenactment of the campfire scene every year at the family campout. He taught them life skills and played with them like toys on Christmas day every time they were around. Nothing gave him greater pleasure in recent years than watching Jeffery and Katie’s twin girls play in his backyard.
Our dad was a man of strength. He stood right here and sang to our mom on the day of her funeral. Not every note was perfect, and he was upset about that afterwards.
If someone ever tells you that the self-made man is a myth, tell them about our dad. There are others like him here in this church and this community, people of will, of character, of grace, of pride. They are the people he taught us to look up to.
My last interaction, near the end of the family campout two weeks ago, was not good. I had come up to the house to get something we needed at the campsite, but there was a mechanical issue that needed attention at his house. I worked on it for four hours, puttering around the house, trying to get it to work. I’m sure everyone thought I was napping. He came home, saw what the problem was and shuffled out to the garage. He slowly walked down the hall, with one implement in his hand and, within five minutes, everything was fixed.
I just wanted to whack him on the head.
But that’s who he was. Our dad knew how to fix things. He knew how to do things. He knew how to sing things. And he knew how to say things.
So I’m still stunned by that question he asked me: “Did I do OK?”
You did great, dad. You did great.
Michael "catching" a fish. |
He Taught Me to Fish
As anyone who ever spent 30 seconds talking to Papaw Don could tell you, he loved sports. He’d played baseball in high school and for years after, he’d refereed and umped and announced in basketball and baseball, he’d been to hundreds of high school and college football games, and he’d played golf for decades, using his big backyard as a personal driving range.
Michael at his first Durham Bulls game. |
But one thing we could always connect over was fishing. Papaw loved fishing, and it was the closest thing to a sport that I ever enjoyed. And since our house was right next to a pond that was always well-stocked, it was pretty common for us to find ourselves fishing whenever he came down to Raleigh.
At some point, we developed a bit of a ritual — Papaw would come down on a Friday for one of my ill-fated T-ball or coaches’ pitch games, or one of Benjamin’s far more promising ones. He’d spend the night and we’d go to the NC State football game the next day, and then he’d get convinced to spend another night with us. And come early Sunday morning, Benjamin and I would rush downstairs to beg mom and dad to let us skip church and stay home to fish with Papaw. We’d barely have gotten permission before we ran outside to grab our tackle boxes and start digging up the yard for worms. Then the three of us — and sometimes a few of the neighbor kids — would get some lawn chairs and carefully walk down the steep, often muddy hill to the pond. We’d fish for hours, pulling little crappies and the occasional bass out of there until mom and dad walked down, typically still in church clothes, to summon us to lunch.
For a while, Benjamin and I couldn’t cast our own rods, and we’d dutifully bring them over to Papaw every time we needed it sent back out. Combine that with my tendency to reel in far too quickly and far too often, and it meant Papaw cast far more than his fair share of fishing line on my behalf. Every time, he’d smile, wind back, and send the bobber farther into that pond than I can even manage today. And when we started to get more adventurous and attempt to cast our own lines, it was Papaw who’d calmly show us how. It was also Papaw who’d calmly free the line every time we got it stuck in one of the trees around the lake, something which happened so often we started calling those trees “fish sticks.”
Whenever we’d finally catch something, Benjamin and I — and most of the kids in the neighborhood — were usually too squeamish to take the fish off ourselves, so that was always a job he’d help with. More often than not, he’d take a hold of the fish, pull it off in one swift motion, and in the same movement toss it right back in. Every year, when mom hosted the neighborhood fishing derby, Papaw came to help with that — while he was officially a judge, his score sheet was blank more often than not, and he’d usually spend the day walking around the pond, helping all the teenage judges get fish off the little kids’ lines, giving tips out to anyone who needed them, and talking with the parents that were sitting beside their kids. He was always in his element on those days, talking, building community, teaching men and women to fish.
When I think of Papaw Don, it’ll be of those times, sitting next to him, hearing him point and chuckle when a fish bit the line. It’ll be of his calm and careful teaching style and his unending patience. It’ll be of him having just as much fun as us, if not more, sitting down beside that pond.
Family is a Happy Place
By Rebecca Earl Black
Niece
Clearly, I'm not one of the many great writers in the family... but here's my greatest memories of Uncle Don I've been thinking about since I heard the news yesterday. (...in no particular order, bc editing on a phone "ain't gonna happen"... and grammar/punctuation, use of !!!, or anything else I do doesn't count either! *TIM!* Bc, again, I'm not a writer and I just don't worry about those things. Oh yeah, and some are stolen pics too.)
A Man With a Yake
What I was too little to understand at the time was his yake was actually a property on Lake Norman.
He was a second Dad to me and the hole left in my heart by his absence will be matched by no one. To my dear cousins Donita Davis Beth Peeler Finley and Tim Peeler: thank you for sharing your Daddy with all of us kids. We were lucky to have him and blessed to love and be loved by such a special soul.
My Personal Seatbelt
Niece
"Don't Do What Papaw Does"
By Matthew FinleyPapaw Don taught us how to fish, to swing a golf club and a baseball bat, to shoot that sweet baby hook of his off the backboard, to plant and harvest, to laugh at goofy puns, to sing "Puff the Magic Dragon" and "My Ding-A-Ling," to get in a little trouble without getting caught by any of the mommas, to get full up on oysters and shrimp while runnin’ the deep fryer in the garage before ever actually sitting down to eat Christmas dinner, but most of all, he taught us all how to be great men.
Hold on Tight
Grandson
I love you Paw Paw Don. There is no easy way to express how much we will miss you.