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Monday, January 26, 2004

A (Very) Brief History of Frank Canning

frank_sm.jpg
Diane and I have morphed into rigid ritualists. Not only do we brush our teeth everyday, shower every time we walk by the bathroom, and obsessively check our email, we also eat dinner Friday nights at the Sushi House and breakfast most Sundays at a local diner. Last Friday we were already seated when Dan joined us. He slid in next to Diane and when the waitress came by he smiled, pointed at Diane’s Chardonnay, and said, “I’ll have one of those.” Then, with his arms crossed, he looked at Diane and asked,

“So what was your relationship like with your father?”

Diane hesitated, missed half a beat and replied,

“It was good. I loved my father. He was smart and funny. A wry kind of funny.”

“You mean like Susan?”

“No, more like….Matthew.”

“Didn’t he give you math problems at the dinner table?”

“He could have.” Diane looked across the table at me as if I would have the answer. I thought, maybe Uncle Bill, but not Frank.

“We did have political discussions at the table. He loved debate. But my mother didn’t like it all, she would get up and do the dishes. His relationship with Susan was sharp; he sparred with her, but with me, he was softer. Tickled me, and when we were driving he would reach over and slap my knee. Like Michael does now.”

Dan looked my way.

“So you knew Frank?”

“Oh yeah. We went down to New City a lot. But I mostly knew his death, not his life. I was there once or twice before we found out about his cancer. I remember dinner on Scott Drive, when we argued about Macrobiotics. He said people died eating that way; I thought kinda narrow of you to choose a worst case example. Maybe he was testing to see if I could spar as well as Susan. Well, I couldn’t. Still can’t. Anyway, it was an embarrassing way to start a relationship. For me. I remember very early in his illness, he cooked lamb on the grill. A meal I’d heard so much about from Diane, but this time, one he overcooked. I saw mostly the frail Frank, not the Frank of legend. “

Dan turned back to Diane.

“Did he visit you in Somerville when you were living with Michael?”

“No. He helped me move, but he didn’t come back. I don’t think he approved of the apartment, he thought it needed work. He wanted to paint it.”

“Did he say anything about your living situation?”

“No, he was a liberal. He didn’t say that we were living in sin, or anything like that. Like my mother. Remember, Michael, when I slipped and told Flo I was living with you.”

“She said, ëI think it’s time you come back home.’ “

“He was…a liberal? Dan seemed surprised.

“Yes, on social issues.”

“Looking at Wolfman and Girlfriend I can see why Emerson was upset about my choice of friends. I might feel the same way now.”

“Emerson must have been upset when you left Raytheon,” I offered.

“He was stunned. Couldn’t believe it.”

“What work did Frank do?”

“Worked for Bell Tel.”

“Was he an engineer?”

“Started as an engineer, but he moved up to management.”

“And his father?”

“Worked for Bell Tel too.”

And that was the end of the conversation. No closed loops, only a new topic- Dan’s diet – to take its place. I don’t know what Diane was thinking as she answered Dan’s questions, but it made me sad. I miss Frank because of what I know about his relationship wth Diane, Susan, and Patti. He loved them in a way that a parent should love his children- unequivocally. There were his daughters and then there was everyone else. I wished Matthew could have experienced that love from this playful grandfather. And I wish that Frank had known Matthew. He would finally have found another soul in the family to spar with.

posted by michael at 4:20 pm  

4 Comments

  1. We all wish Matthew could have known Frank…grandparents, dead or alive, have some type of impact on their grandchildren. Genetics, perhaps, or maybe its souls travelling to the next generation. It is sad that Matthew didn’t know him, but he kind of does know him, through his mother, aunts and grandmother. Thanks for the evocative story.

    Comment by choked up — January 26, 2004 @ 7:20 pm

  2. You have no idea how much I would love to add many stories to this short history. But I shall settle for telling about the arithmetic problems.

    I do not remember Frank’s ever initiating math topics at the dinner table. Nothing much to argue about. He preferred a topic where two or more clear positions could reasonably be held and rationally be discussed.

    But, starting when I went to kindergarten, or maybe a few months before, he did give me a problem to solve almost everyday until we moved to Metuchen.

    We lived in an old Victorian house in Roselle, New Jersey. The place had been converted into two apartments — one up, one down. Ours was up, so all four rooms had once been bedrooms. The kitchen was the biggest of them, and the warmest. We spent most of our awake time there. At least when there was no company.

    At the eating end of that room, Frank hung a blackboard. At first it was very low. As I grew taller, he moved it up the wall. Each morning, before he left for work, he would write a problem — always a step or two beyond what I was doing in school — on that board for me to solve before he got home.

    After dinner, while Flo was doing dishes, he would talk to me about the process I had used to solve the problem. It was an amazing thing. He cared so much more about my thinking and my ability to express that thinkiing than about my getting the right answer that it made me excited to share my ideas with him, even when I had been unable to solve the problem. Every father should give his child such a gift!

    Comment by Sparrer — January 26, 2004 @ 7:46 pm

  3. I stopped short of asking the final question: “Diane, how did feel about your father’s dying so young?” Figured it couldn’t be expressed in words.

    And thanks to Sparer: I knew that I had not made up the notion of Frank and math problems! It must’ve been from you that I heard this very story.

    Unembellished reportage, Mr. Stroryteller. And great photo to illustrate the legendary Frank, known to many of us only through his fine daughters and egg nog recipe.

    Comment by Questioner — January 27, 2004 @ 5:48 pm

  4. I notice one daughter was not mentioned in the very brief history of my father. Didn’t she count?

    Comment by daughter? — February 29, 2004 @ 8:07 pm

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