Wednesday, November 18, 2020

My Uncle Tod


 I lost my Uncle on Monday. I’m not keeping score but that’s two down and two still around.

He was a good guy. Some of my closest friends have the same qualities I attribute to my Uncle. I don’t think that’s a coincidence.

I wasn’t super close to my Uncle, but I cherished the time I got to spend with him. Now I wish for more.

As a young boy I saw that my Uncle could do anything, and he put his best in everything he did. Even plowing the snow off the airport runway in my brand-new Starter jacket on a snowy Christmas night. It was oh so cold and the machine was far past its prime. My Uncle disappeared under the hood to investigate. He was engulfed in a cloud of steam as he found a rotten radiator hose. Not one to leave anything unfinished; I’m pretty sure he repaired that old truck with duct tape, and got the job done. There really wasn’t much he couldn’t fix.

I imagined in my mind that he went to every Scout camp, although I do not know if he actually did. He certainly knew every knot and loved being outdoors. I didn’t ever go camping with him, but I’m certain I used knowledge gleaned from him each and every time I went. From how to setup a camp, the ways to start a campfire, but usually the knots. He taught me the best fisherman knot. I still use it to this day.

He enjoyed escaping reality in fantasy books and games. When the Internet came along and combined the two it was easy to see how he would have fallen in love. From old Quake clans to older IRC chats, WoW, he really made connections and felt right at home.

The Uncle I knew would do anything for a friend, or even a stranger, and if you were closest to him it might be easy to think he would put those people before you, but I doubt that was his intention. My Uncle was not perfect, I don't think he pretended to be, but I do believe he did his best and was the best man he could be.

Like everyone, life is hard, and he would escape it as often as he could, at a great cost. But he knew how to enjoy the happy moments, the good times, and cherish the joy he got from them.

For a long while he had a little dog that carried his heart. Everywhere. They went together. And I am so happy they had each other.

There is so much more I want to tell you about my Uncle. About the go-cart he let me drive. The BB-gun he let me shoot. By myself. When I had no business doing so. He was there the first time I shot a real gun too. I want to tell you which Shel Silverstein poem still conjures up an image of his old, cluttered garage. The three-wheeler I flipped, and the boat I borrowed for a whole summer.

I’m so thankful for everything about my Uncle Tod, and I wanted him to know that.

 

 -Ryan