3/17/2012
We’re into the weekend here (a “holiday”
weekend for all you Irishmen & women) and things are a bit more quiet in
the courtyard - the view of which I lost today after being moved to a new room
right next door but no balcony and the window bed was already occupied – oh
well. Falling leaves or duck behavior I
can comment little on (I can hear the sighs of relief from regular
readers). On weekends the menu only has
one non-vegetarian choice rather than the normal two (actually they print 2
identical choices so as not to throw off the symmetry of the seven day
menu). The weekend shift of nurses means
new faces to get used to – so far, this morning included, they’ve all been
good. My roomie went home after his
marrow donation – a good guy. My new
roomie is a young (late 20s?) patient under treatment rather than a well person
doing a good deed.
So far, so good as it comes to tolerating this
blast of chemo. The battery of
anti-nausea medication has been working well.
Where was this stuff when I was a fisherman? The first nine months of that life had me far
to well acquainted with nausea (note “sea” is the second syllable). I was reading a novel with a sailing setting
the other day and the description of the newby’s struggle with mal de mer went something like this:
“For the first days she thought she was about to die. In the days following she feared she would
not”. Yup, nailed that! I don’t like nausea and seasickness is just
plain the worst.
So, let’s tie a few threads here together. It’s St. Patrick’s Day a day which has always
made it easy to remember the more important, to me, anniversary and that is my
dad’s birthday. My dad, through sheer
benevolent nepotism, was also my boss, better I should say my captain, for the
eight years I spent as a fisherman. A “site”
(the position of a regular, share of the net catch worth earning crewman) on
his boat was considered a very fortunate job.
So today it will be a shout out to the memory of some things about my
dad.
My dad was a good man. Good in the human sense. I know, biblically,
doctrinally speaking that there’s no such thing but that really means no one’s
good enough to meet God’s standard of good enough and that’s the whole reason
why an infinitely good God sacrificed Himself – to allow us to be good by His
sacrifice and to be able to enjoy Him now and forever.
But Dad was a good guy. He was a good guy during my younger
years. After he came to faith in Christ
while I was in high school he became a truly good guy.
By the way, Dad’s objection to faith was
largely of intellectual type. What helped push him that step beyond where a believing
wife, six believing kids, and a Baptist pastor as one of his best friends had
urged him was reading about the life of Paul.
Paul was an intellectual, a powerful one, who had met the Christ he was
persecuting. He met a risen Christ and
it’s tough to argue against a risen guy who claimed to be God. Somehow the two things, resurrection and
divinity, are mutually reinforcing. If
this makes you go, “Really now.”, check out a reputable apologist’s (Strobel,
McDowell, Lewis, etc.) summary of the proofs of resurrection. Whenever I have my doubts I have to go back
and say that a historically resurrected Savior demands my faith if I want to be
honest to he truth.
What are some of the things that were good
about Dad? I’ll list and describe just a
few of the many things I admire.
He loved his family and did is best for
them. I know this can be said of many
but it had its particular challenges for Dad.
Dad honored his own parents and this, from my experiences with them, was
not easy. They were highly opinionated,
especially about what other people should specifically do. Their expectations for others had little to
do with the individuals and everything to do with their vision for perfection,
not often based on values shared by their son, his wife or their grandchildren.
Dad, their only son, chose one fine woman for a wife and together they raised
six kids. None of these kids really
towed the specified line with the grandparents but, to the approval of others, none
of them have spent a day in jail and all of them follow the Lord. These paths were often distasteful to Dad’s
parents. So for Dad to honor his parents
as he protected his own family was always a challenge and he tried his best and
showed more grace than I can imagine myself demonstrating.
I admire him in this and also see that he did
his best to break this chain of what could be a family curse. I always felt Dad was behind me in my
decisions. Considering what he came out
of, that’s huge.
There are so many other tokens of his devotion
to family. He was, and remained his
whole life, the love of Mom’s life and vice versa. Family vacations for a family of eight with
the camper – always an adventure (I particularly remember riding air mattresses
down rapids in the Penobscot River – skating close to the edge of safety, but
what could go wrong with Dad there). He
had five sons and was fond of recalling that, at the announcement that child #
6 was another boy, he said sarcastically something like “Great, more Pack
Meetings!” – anyone who was taken a son through Cub Scouts catches his
drift. He went (when he wasn’t fishing, mom
didn’t only just deliver 5 sons but she took up the slack there). His support of Scouting led to the first
Allagash River canoe trip (I was too young for that one but was thrilled by the
slides) that, in turn, led to a tradition of canoe trip for the Kraines boys
(my sister missed out but got a fishing trawler named after her). Truly, a wonderful experience.
Dad shooting the falls with son Mark |
Dad watching as two sons capsize and swamp - twice, third time's the charm |
Six kids college educated at Mom and Dad’s
expense. The long held July Fourth
family clambake that so often stretched the definition and total number of
family and included, for the nuclear family members, the clash of the plaids
was so much a Dad thing (which in no way implies others didn’t work, we all had
our roles not the least to mention Mom, but Dad seemed the heart of it). The grandkids, all twenty, experienced his
goodness. The list goes on in the
memories of family.
Dad made a great Deacon. His natural bent toward helpfulness and his
belief that there was a solution to every problem joined his Christian
compassion and benefitted many inside and outside the church body. Much of his work was unknown to many then and
probably still is now. It was a great fit
for his years after fishing.
Dad's first boat of his own |
Cap'n Bob hauling the "bag" on board the Karen Louise |
Dad cleaning Yellowfin Tuna on a memorable but not very profitable trip |
As a boat owner and captain (Captain Bob) he
was a good man. In this business that
was so marked by transience, most guys that worked for him did so for long
periods of time. In a business marked by
high rates of alcoholism, his boats were dry.
The crew wasn’t necessarily dry but they always got one extra chance after
showing up drunk the first time, after that they had to look elsewhere for
work. Dad didn’t preach or get all
heavy-handed about it, he just exhibited a good life unencumbered by excessive drink
and its attendant problems. The upshot
of this was that many a crewman left behind alcohol abuse after a stint on the
boat. His concern and sense of
responsibility for “making a living” for the crew, and his personal friendship
and advice for them made a huge difference in many a guy’s life. Two comments were made at Dad’s funeral, one
publicly and one privately. One of his
long-time crew stood up to speak at the funeral and said as his opening
statement, “Bob Kraines saved my life.”
Wow! The other private comment
was made to me by a crew member that had worked for Dad before and during part
of my tenure on the boat. He said,
“Whenever I have a tough question about what I should decide I find myself
asking, ‘What would Bob Kraines do?’”
Wow!
Dad fished commercially most of his professional life after a BA in Business on the GI Bill. He never was famous; he never joined glamorous organizations (the now defunct Point Judith Fisherman’s Cooperative didn’t go in for glamor); he didn’t blow his own horn. He just lived the life of am imperfect but deeply good man and in that quiet way he touched so many people. I worked during college part time in a local funeral home. I’ve been to more funerals that most of you reading this. I have never seen a church so packed or a funeral procession so long as the one composed of those who came to honor Dad directly or recognize the impact he had on the particular family member they knew.
Dad fished commercially most of his professional life after a BA in Business on the GI Bill. He never was famous; he never joined glamorous organizations (the now defunct Point Judith Fisherman’s Cooperative didn’t go in for glamor); he didn’t blow his own horn. He just lived the life of am imperfect but deeply good man and in that quiet way he touched so many people. I worked during college part time in a local funeral home. I’ve been to more funerals that most of you reading this. I have never seen a church so packed or a funeral procession so long as the one composed of those who came to honor Dad directly or recognize the impact he had on the particular family member they knew.
As I face a life threatening illness at age
54, I can’t help but remember Dad’s first heart attack at age 55. For me it meant my dad was mortal. It hit hard personally. Dad went on to have 20+ more years of life
for which we all rejoice. But I remember
how hard it was, how weird it felt to recognize my dad’s mortality. I was able to share that feeling with Carl
when I was diagnosed with this aggressive disease. I hope it gives him, Sam, Amanda and Hannah
permission to “process” well.
But more I’d like to take a page from Dad’s
book and exhibit to my kids that I believe their decisions and directions in
life are their own but my wish for them is that wherever they go and do that
they go and do so walking in relationship with the infinitely good God that my
dad, their grandfather found to be more that sufficient to meet life and
death. So kids walk with God and try to
stay out of jail for anything stupid – the rest is gravy and even the less than
perfect choices can and will be redeemed by the God of redemption as you walk
with Him.
I’ll close with this quote from an email I
received from a good friend and fellow missionary in Europe who knew my family
and often stayed with Mom and Dad while home in Rhode Island (David Lohnes –
many will recognize the name). It was
sent when he heard of Dad’s passing.
“What a great man was your father.
I just thought he was wonderful, such a fine mixture of
Godliness and humanity, just like it should be.
No more enemies, then…for your dad!
This was the last one.”
And those who knew him and share in the hope of Christ join
and say, “Amen!”
4 comments:
such a wonderful tribute to your dad! I wish I had known him. Know that we are praying for you as you continue through this process.
Thank you for sharing about your amazing dad, Russ. What a blessing to read your post. It was a reminder to me of my wonderful heritage (and a dad and mom who, like yours, raised 6 kids). The pictures you posted are priceless!
Wonderful post Russ - so sweet to remember your dad!
Thanks for sharing. Although I was just a little girl...I have fond memories of him.
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