My biological dad walked out on us while my mom was still pregnant.
Like everyone, they weren't perfect. But they did a great job raising my sis and I.
Did you have one good parent?
My parents are amazing. Just bio dad is a POS
‘Step’ dad has been in my life since I was in kindergarten. Treated me like a son since the day we met. Best man I’ve ever met.I think a man stepping up and loving and raising a child not his own is a good man. I’m glad you had that friend.
Exactly how I feelBoth of my parents passed away back in 2003 & 2004 about 9 months apart. They were great parents and I still miss them like it happened yesterday. Whoever said time heals all wounds is a liar.
It's strange when I look back at when my parents were that age and younger. Now I'm a good ways past that. Time marches on my friend and we aren't here very long.Yes and dreading the day that they are no longer here with me. I consider my dad my best friend and they both would do anything for me and my girls. As they get older, its tough to witness their age. I still picture them like when I was growing up and they were in their 40's.
Yes, yes I did.
My mother passed away three years ago and she was the rock of our family.
My parents taught me so many thing that helped me through life and things I’ve taught my own children. Treating others with respect and dignity, charity, the value of working hard to achieve my dreams and so many more.
My father was a Vietnam vet who saw the worst of it. He came back to the world with a lot of pain from the things he saw and did over there. Then he met a poor girl from Ohio County at a Black Sabbath concert in Cincinnati in 1971 and married her three months later. My mother helped my father heal and put his burdens down. They were a true love story.
My dad was a WW2 vet. i wish i had asked him more about it. His dad was a WW1 vet who I never really knew. I am a Viet Nam vet. Lots of guys had it worse than me, but I saw and was involved in things that haunt me to this day. The Lord has helped me cope or I probably would not have survived the first years after I got home.I lost my Dad back in March, and he too, was a Vietnam Vet, and saw live combat in the 9th Infantry. My Dad never told me much about Vietnam growing up, and even as I grew into an adult. I knew that he struggled with PTSD and he masked it in some unfortunate ways. It wasn't until he passed, when I had to call some of his friends that he served with, that I truly learned what he experienced, and what he had to do. It honestly broke my heart that he lived with that inside of him for decades. My Dad was a great Dad, who I love and miss immensely. But knowing the amount of trauma he was holding would have given me more insight and understanding as to how he was when I was a child.
There is a quote, "only the dead have seen the end of war." At my Dad's funeral, my sister handed me a letter that he had written for me. I sat on it for about a month, before I was ready to read it. Among the many things he told me, one was that he wished I had known him before he went to Vietnam, as he was very different. I truly believe that quote applies to my Dad, as Vietnam did quite the number on him.
My dad was a WW2 vet. i wish i had asked him more about it. His dad was a WW1 vet who I never really knew. I am a Viet Nam vet. Lots of guys had it worse than me, but I saw and was involved in things that haunt me to this day. The Lord has helped me cope or I probably would not have survived the first years after I got home.
My dad was a WW2 vet. i wish i had asked him more about it. His dad was a WW1 vet who I never really knew. I am a Viet Nam vet. Lots of guys had it worse than me, but I saw and was involved in things that haunt me to this day. The Lord has helped me cope or I probably would not have survived the first years after I got home.