Exactly one week ago, I was born in a small town in Ecuador. From what I remember of the first day of my life, it was joyful, carefree, full of love, full of fun. I especially remember my Grandfather, the kindest person I ever knew. I was very close to him. His name was Justo Rodríguez. I called him “Papá Justito.” I still see his kind, smiling face.
That first day went by much too quickly and when I was only 10 I left my native country to join my parents in the Netherlands Antilles. Sadly, my grandparents stayed behind. I was too excited to realize how much I loved them, especially my grandfather. I was too young to fathom how much he loved me, how terribly he would miss me or to contemplate that I might never see him again.
The next day would be a busy and eventful one. My father retired and we left our little paradise in the Antilles to live in the Netherlands where my siblings and I were educated.
That very same afternoon, we emigrated to the United Sates where I joined the military, became a U.S. citizen and received the best education and training in the world. A few hours later, I met my future wife while spending a couple of hours on a military assignment in England.
Head-over-heels in love, we were married early in the morning of the third day of my life. A couple of hours later we became the proud parents of a lovely baby boy. Almost at the same instant, my Grandfather in Ecuador passed away. I spent the rest of that hectic and consequential day building my military career, nurturing my new young family.
The next day would be another long and busy one. While serving my newly adopted country in Germany, we were blessed with a beautiful baby daughter. I stayed very busy that day taking care of a growing family and working late into the night, advancing my career and my education. At day’s end I retired from the military and went on to work for a defense contractor where I would become even more intent on succeeding at my second career.
As to the fifth day of my life, now out of uniform and in a business suit, I only remember a whirlwind of airplane rides to far-away cities and lands, a blur of dinner meetings and presentations, and the insatiably compulsion to collect tons of business cards with precious little notes—potential new business for my company. It was a day so busy and “important” that I failed to appreciate the gorgeous sunset or to notice that the days were beginning to grow shorter. But also a night that turned tragic when I received the shattering news that my Mother had been taken away from us under horrific circumstances.
I stayed busy for at least part of the next day, the sixth day, until I suddenly realized that my wife’s hair was turning silver; that my little boy was now a fine young man whom I had hardly gotten to know. Also a day when, just as unexpectedly, another fine young man asked for the hand of my little girl. That very same day, I retired from my second career, just in time to come home to Texas to give my daughter away in marriage. That evening, for the first time, I enjoyed a glorious sunset and finally realized what is truly important in life.
On the morning of the seventh and most recent day in my life’s week, I became the grandfather to precious boy. A boy who has been a new, bright light in my life as the days grow even shorter. It has been a wonderful day, a day full of the special, priceless joys that only a grandchild can bring to a grandparent. It was also a day when my grandson turned ten, exactly the same age I was when I left my Grandfather behind in Ecuador, never to see him again.
I now know how much my Grandfather must have loved me, how much he must have suffered when I left him, how much he must have missed not seeing me grow up…
It is now the end of “my week,” a week that has gone by much too swiftly. It seems inconceivable that only a week ago I cried “Hello” and that today it is almost time to whisper “Goodbye,” as the days, the hours, have forebodingly turned so very, very short.
At age 70, I hope to be around for perhaps another day to see my grandson grow up and see him have a family of his own—perhaps long enough to cherish a great-grandchild.
If that’s out of the question, I ask to have a few more hours to help guide my grandson through his teenage years, to hold him and comfort him when he has problems, to see him graduate from high school and on his way to college.
If that’s not possible either, I pray to be given a few more minutes to tell my grandson and all my family how much I love them, to tell them how precious every fleeting second of every day of our lives is, and to thank Him for seven short but exhilarating and unforgettable days—more than I deserve.
Dedicated to Papá Justito and to our loving Mother, María Luisa Kortekaas, who was taken away from us, suddenly and tragically, 21 years ago this month.
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“One day your life will flash before your eyes. Make sure it’s worth watching” ~Unknown Source
Image: Courtesy, Istockphoto.com
The author is a retired U.S. Air Force officer and a writer.