We just got home from a week on the road. It’s been a busy seven days. I told stories in four different states, I ate a lot of barbecue, I saw a ballgame in Atlanta.
When we arrived home, our dogs were psychotic. Otis (alleged Labrador) was barking. Thelma Lou (bloodhound) was howling in a low-pitched voice.
If you ever hear a bloodhound howl, it will bless your heart.
Which reminds me. I’m starting to sound like my parents. My father used to use that phrase a lot, long before it became a T-shirt cliché. Whenever he talked about anything that was particularly good, that phrase was used.
For example: “Try the cornbread, it will bless your heart.”
Or: “There’s nothing like hearing Bill Gaither hit them high notes, like he’s been castrated, it’ll bless your heart.”
Years later, people started sending cutesy chain emails about this phrase and ruined it for the rest of us.
Still, the phrase had real meaning in my household. I remember once, when our church was shorthanded on nursery workers. Someone asked my father
to help hold the newborns.
My father was in the nursery all Sunday. You couldn’t drag him away from that room. The blue-collar man rocked a hundred babies and kissed two hundred fat cheeks.
And when my mother asked him how it went, he said, “It blessed my heart.”
I’ll never forget that. And I’ll never forget him.
So anyway, after my dogs mauled me, I unloaded luggage from our vehicle. I heard a horn honking. It was the UPS truck. The deliveryman handed me a package and bid me good day.
When he drove away, I tore the manila paper and felt my breath catch. I wasn’t expecting it. It was a book. Written by me. My name was on the cover.
My name. There’s something about seeing your name in print. It does something to you.
My wife…