| In Loving Memory of the Late, Great Kenneth L. Ingham (1929-2004) | |
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Until we meet again, Dad. |
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| My
father was the most soft-spoken and gentle man I've ever known. He had a
great sense of humor—so much so that when something struck
him as particularly funny, he'd laugh
so hard he'd cry. He had fine tastes, admiring
beautiful and valuable things—from shrimp and lobster to
Cadillacs and
precious metals. Oh, how he must love those streets of gold. . . . My father loved movies. (The apple doesn't fall far from the tree.) He could sit and watch any movie and get engrossed in it. He particularly liked actor Alan Ladd. In his golden years, my father took the time to list his favorite movies of all time. Here is his list as he wrote it. As he confirmed to me at the time, its sequence doesn't have any significance: East of Eden, Casablanca, Shane, Marty, The Great Gatsby, The Inspector General, It's a Wonderful Life, Stalag 17, Regarding Henry He didn't list the movie Giant, but I know it was also one of his favorites. |
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| I have many fond memories; I can't list them all, but a few will do: I cherished our times watching a ballgame, a movie, General Hospital, or Columbo; laughing together at the antics of The Three Stooges; chuckling at how many times Emeril Lagasse said, "Oh yeh, babe"; enjoying The Andy Griffith Show and noticing how a particular episode moved my dad to tears (certain movies had that effect too); opening baseball cards, always hoping for "one for the safe"; and our Friday tradition, which I'll keep to myself, but in his honor, I still do each week. |
The
separation is painful, but the following
stanza from a poem says it best:
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| In
my Father's house are many mansions
[John 14:2].
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