We weren’t particularly close, but these were some of my recollections of Philip Doan this Father’s Day. Was he Atticus Finch or Homer Simpson? I’m not sure. (Maybe I was Bart Simpson?) A few examples:
--Eating forbidden cookies in a box and then running away as he chased me. Finally, he ran out of breath. “Let’s forget about this,” he said.
--Angry about his micromanaging my chores, I “inadvertently” positioned a hose to squirt water into an open car window. Whoops!
--Thrilled when he set off illegal fireworks on the Fourth of July outside our motel in Olympia, Wash. When the explosion was much larger than we expected, he made us get in the car and flee before the cops came. Homer Simpson would have done that.
--Getting a boxing lesson from him when I was about 10. I landed a right hook on his head and he immediately declared the lesson over. Oh that felt good!
--Forced to go with him to a record store and listen to a record of Mario Lanza singing “The StudentPrince.” I loved it. When he asked what I thought, I said, the way a teenager would, “It was OK, I guess.”
--Him recruiting me to appear in the opera “La Boheme” at the L.A. Shrine Auditorium. I was a non-singing 10-year-old street urchin stealing food from a vendor.
--Hearing that he intervened when I signed up for study hall in the 12th grade and got the counselor to enroll me in physics instead. Atticus Finch would do that.
--Taking us at my birthday parties to a submarine, a bowling alley and an ice skating rink.
--Hearing that he boasted to my uncle about what an obedient teen I was. My uncle responding, “Well, what about the time he let that broad drive your car and they crashed into a traffic island on Arlington Boulevard?” I knew I shouldn’t have told my cousin about that!
--Forcing me to get off my butt and find a job the summer I graduated from high school and wanted to loaf. He liked that I found one in San Francisco’s seedy Tenderloin district, probably a dangerous place for a 17-year-old at night.
--Traveling around the country with him on trains, his true passion, for a month when I was 19. He loved to sing “The Wreck of the Old 97” but never got to visit the site in Danville.
--Seeing him angry with me when I refused to cut in line at the White House tour. I think he always wanted a more aggressive son.
--The time a fly ball from Ken Aspromonte’s bat was heading for my head at a San Francisco Seals baseball game. As I ducked, my Dad stuck out his hands and caught the ball and the crowd applauded. I still have that ball!
-- Climbing within 500 feet to the top of a Sierra Nevada mountain peak with him, when he had trouble breathing and lay down. After I prayed for him, he declared, ‘You’re a good boy, Mike.” And we made it back down.
--In a nursing home, finally getting up the courage to tell him I loved him. He seemed to like it, but maybe it was too late. By then his memory was mostly gone and I don’t know if he really got it.
(Drawing by Ron Miller)

