Today is my daughter’s 20th
birthday.
20 years ago, at exactly 10pm,
Morgan Wray Daliessio entered this world and entered my heart.
To be honest, she’d already made
herself quite at home where my heart is concerned long before she was born. I
loved her from the first sonogram. Whatever momentary disappointment my Italian
heritage demanded at not having a son as my firstborn, was overwhelmed by the
immense love I felt for her when I saw that grainy image.
In hindsight, God -knowing I
would only have one child—gave me a princess, so that I would always be a king.
Several years ago, she decided
she didn’t like her given name, “Morgan” and took to calling herself Daisy. At
first, I choked on that. I loved her name and didn’t understand why she didn’t.
But honestly, if that’s all the trouble she gives me in this life, then I’m
fine. And besides…if you know my daughter, you know how well the name Daisy
fits her.
She brightens the dull landscape
by simply being there. She is quiet, thoughtful, and possesses a simple beauty
that makes you take notice, even though you’ve seen her before. Just like a
daisy.
She possesses an artist’s eye and
turns what she sees into drawings so wonderful that you scratch your head at
her talent.
She loves to cook and experiments
in the kitchen with great success. She is a loving friend, a caring daughter,
and a godly, Jesus-loving, believer.
But more than anything, she can
sing.
She has loved music since her
earliest days. When she was very little, maybe a year old or so, she loved
music. She sang along with everything she heard. She went through a phase where
she was mesmerized by Shania Twain videos. She would be toddling along in the
living room and if a Shania video came on, she’d plop down (literally…as
just-learning-to-walk babies are prone to do) in front of the TV and sit there
unmoving until the song was over. Then she’d go back to whatever she was doing.
She began composing little songs
when she was three or four, and now…she is a music major here at Liberty and
possesses one of the most clean, emotional, beautiful voices I have ever heard.
Most of my friends chalk it up to
a just dad being proud when I boast about her…until they hear her sing. Then
they understand that I’m not just a proud dad. She’s the real deal. You feel
her heartbeat when she sings. The sadness she’s experienced over the years,
when her mom and I divorced, when her mom remarried, when her mom’s new husband
was an abusive monster. She’s lost two beloved surrogate grandparents over the
years, and more than a few friendships. She moved to a town she had never seen
before at age sixteen -a time in life when uprooting and moving to a place
unknown is particularly difficult—and dealt with the sadness by singing.
Singing opens doors for her. Singing is her safe place, and the medium through
which she expresses her soul.
This is her most recent composition. She is singing ALL the parts here and playing guitar:
Daisy: "Lovers like Flowers"
This is her most recent composition. She is singing ALL the parts here and playing guitar:
Daisy: "Lovers like Flowers"
I was 33 when she was born. Back
then it looked like life was going well. We hadn’t planned children so early in
our marriage. In fact, I like to kid that “We were practicing birth control
like religion.” But God had other plans and so sixteen months after we wed, we
became parents. The night she was born, I was overwhelmed by how much I loved
her.
Instantly.
Without limit.
I held her in her little “Classic
Pooh” receiving blanket and told her “I love you Morgan” at least a thousand
times between 10pm when she entered this world, and 1pm when the nurses chased
me out and made me go home.
Every time I spoke those words,
my heart healed just a little bit. I’d never heard those words from my own
father. I’d wondered what it might be like to have heard them through the
years, and somehow, saying them to my own daughter was a tiny glimpse. She changed
my life when she was born.
About 25 years ago, my dear
friend Rick Elias wrote this song for his son Taylor on his first birthday. I
lost the cassette Rick had given me with the song on it and he’s never released
it. These are all the words I can recall:
“Oh, the happiest day I have ever known was the day you took your
first breath.
And to watch you grow in the warmth of the sun,
Is the only other wish, I could ever have.
But if cold night winds should begin to howl and if trouble should
come your way.
Remember these words I’m telling you now.
And all your days I pray you’ll call His name.
Rain will fall, as it surely must
On the heads of the wicked
And the just.
God forbid that rain turn your dreams to rust
And all your days I pray you’ll call His name.
On that bittersweet day many years from now when you take your
first steps on your own
Remember these words I’m telling you now
As much as I’ve loved you
There is One who loves you more
But if cold night winds should begin to howl and if trouble should
come your way
May the warmth of the sun. comfort and guide you
May those cold dark winds stay forever behind you
If you lose your way…know that God will find you
And all your days I pray you’ll call His name.”
Rain has fallen on her dreams.
Rain in the form of a broken family, a frighteningly abusive man in her life, a
daddy who lost everything, including his home and the life he provided her. Yet
she soldiered on and has begun to come out the other side.
I protected her as best I could,
and while her dreams have been dented…they will not turn to rust.
She is the focal point of this
life I lead. The one heart I trust on this Earth. The reason I pray. The reason
I work. The reason I believe. The reason I refuse to give up.
I would set my own dreams on fire
to light the path for hers to come true. I would breath my final breath into
her lungs and watch her live on at my expense and my final action would be to
smile…my final words “I love you.”
The teen years are over. Just
like that. She is an adult now.
But in my heart, she is -and will
always be-- the little girl who once filled out a questionnaire about her daddy
for a Pre-K Father’s Day project. In her eyes, I was 10 feet tall. I liked to
watch the news and “race cars.” She liked to watch me chop food when I cook.
And when they asked her what is the one thing her daddy always says to her, she
said “My daddy always says “He loves me.”
That she grew into adulthood
never wondering whether her daddy loved her, is all the trophy I need.
Buon compleanno Daisy! Il vostro
papĂ vi ama molto.
(Happy Birthday Daisy. Your Daddy
loves you very much.)
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