Thanks for all of the comments! I certainly have a higher respect and better understanding of my dad's life after going through his tools. It's funny, but I actually feel closer to him now than I have in years. Seeing the things he kept, how he "organized", what he used most, etc. - I'm realizing that we had more in common than I really knew.
My Dad's Tools
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I'm sorry to hear of the loss of your father.
I'm very glad of course that you now have these tools and will cherish them. But as I look at the pictures it makes me sad, in rememberance of my father. Like your Dad, mine had hundreds of tools and many that I see in those pictures were the same. As a teen, I spent many hours working with my Dad in his jack-of-all-trades "extra work" during evenings and on weekends. So many tools do I remember, his instructions, and just watching him work with them, as I helped and learned.
I'm not sure I appreciated all that work back then. But the memories are there.
My Dad was sick for some time, and we often talked about the jobs we did together. After he passed, my mother told me that all the tools were mine... but by then there was nothing! My kid brother had taken everything, sold it or did whatever with it. My Dad suspected such, my mother knew nothing, and my brother denies everything.
I'm glad you have your Dad's tools. Cherish them for their value... not their price!
CWSThink it Through Before You Do!Comment
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my Dad's tools
Sorry to hear about the passing of your dad. I too, have many of my dad's tools
even though I did not follow in his trade, I think of him often when I see them
or use some of them to perform a necessary job. My dad was a master plumber
for over forty years and owned his own business for at least 35 of those years.
I remember him telling me many times " always put the tools in their proper place
and take care of them and they will take care of you". He was very particular with his tools
and equipment and he taught me to be the same way with mine.
It is the legacy left to us by our dads and their memories that are the most important lessons
that we can learn. Tools may be a way of conveying that
message to us, because they usually endure long after the passing of a loved one.Comment
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Sorry to hear about your loss. Please accept my condolences. Cherish the memories that come with those tools and I am glad to see that those are bringing you closer to your Dad.Turaj (in Toronto)
"When I read about the evils of drinking, I gave up reading!" Henny Youngman
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