The Compass He Left Behind
Some men teach you how to live. Others teach you how to keep going after they're gone. I almost didn't go to church the Father's Day after my dad died. Not because I was angry at God — though I was, quietly, in the way you're angry at someone you can't stop loving. I didn't go because I didn't know how to sit in a pew and sing about a Heavenly Father when the earthly one I'd had for thirty-four years was six months in the ground, and the absence of him was so loud I couldn't hear anything else. I sat in my truck in the church parking lot for eleven minutes. I know because I watched the clock. Then I went inside, slid into the back row, and stared at my hands for most of the service. Nobody said the wrong thing to me that day. That was something. People learn, eventually, not to say "He's in a better place" to a man who is barely in any place at all. My father's name was Daniel. He went by Dan to everyone except my grandmot...