John W.
Cunningham
March 23, 2005
Patrick
Cunningham, Foundation Trustee, remembers his father in
this
message sent to his friends and colleagues...
I want to tell you about my Dad.
My Dad was a very good
man. A private man, yet a man who loved to be
with people. He was never more energized than when he had been at work
or out with friends and had some story to tell us about his day. He
worked mainly in the trucking industry -- a business of tough men and
low tolerance for failure or weakness. In his latter years, he drove a
limo, showing people the city he loved and helping them safely
celebrate their important events. He was a man of many stories (some
true, many not, but all entertaining just the same). He suffered many
the slings and arrows of life, perhaps many more than he deserved. He
was fiercely loyal to his family. My Dad was a man who would never be
overly and publicly demonstrative of his love for us, but there was
never any question about it -- and in his last few years, he would say
it. He was proud of my brother and myself and ever the doting
grandfather to my girls. (Molly says she will miss him because he could
always pick the best watermelons.) He was tough, he demanded that we
achieve everything that we could with the gifts we were given, he was
fair, and he always wanted the best for my brother and myself. He was a
man of quiet faith. As we went through some of his things this evening,
we found a folder with a few things that he had put together for just
this event. I knew the folder was there, and he had encouraged me some
time ago to read it,but I hadn't wanted to deal with that thought. In
the folder was a document that he wants to have read at his funeral. In
this document, he wrote,
"The swift passing of
time is forever true. Each year I recognize I am
not the man I was the year before; my time is coming. Time gets very
little of our attention as we race around keeping up with all
thatliving requires of us."
"...I know life is short
and I give it my all."
"I want my Funeral to
start with trumpets blowing to welcome my body
into church for the beginning of my new life, which I have worked for
all my years. My soul will be in heaven and I can watch the celebration
and anyone who cries will be pinched by me to wake up to this great
event. Sing happy songs and enjoy the services. I want my family to be
happy for me, I will be with their mother and we will love them
forever. My time on earth is over and I go to my Lord for eternal life."
Honestly, that blew me
away. He goes on to impart these words of
wisdom, which I pass on
to you all:
"Life has taught me to
take nothing for granted. Expect the unexpected.
Remember that the harder you work, the more successful you become.
Failures, given time, become successes. Never, never, never give up."
I leave you with those
words, which resound clearly for me as it was
the bottom line in all he taught me. When I played football, I was
never a starter. He would watch proudly when I got into the game late,
recounting for me later the good plays that I made -- and telling all
of his friends time and time again all about the great hit that I made.
When I finished my senior year season, he asked me once if football had
taught me anything. I wasn't sure where he was going, but he told me
that if nothing else, "you learned how to take a hit and get back up
again, even when that hit hurt your pride and your body; you learned
good sportsmanship; and you learned that sticking it out, even when you
weren't a star player, made you a team player."
If you have a moment
today, think of my father and toot a horn for him.
I'm sure he'll appreciate it. Hug your families and tell them you love
them. Life is short, our daily activities are loud, and we often don't
hear the swift passing of time.
Pat Cunningham
Friends of
John W. Cunningham are encouraged to
contact the
Foundation Administrator to add information and a photograph to this
record.
Total
contributions to the foundation in memory of John W. Cunningham total
$75.00.
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