We’ve got this, my dad and me. We’ve done it before, decades ago, when I was a kid and we ran his office in tandem. At least that’s what I thought then.
Deskwork, we called it. He set me up in a corner with my own desk, a rolling secretary’s chair, a typewriter, and a paper tray marked Inbox.
I typed letters from the Dictaphone machine, filed articles from Christianity Today into his topical filing cabinet, paid the bills, and balanced the family checkbook and the ledger—to the penny. In those days in our family, each penny mattered.
And we sent each other memos. Once I read an article in the Flint Journal about candy stripers. If you were twelve years old, you could volunteer. I was twelve and wanting something new. So I wrote a memo to my dad. I listed the reasons for being a candy striper, proposed that I walk four blocks to the city bus, and then take it to Hurley, the big city hospital. I attached the article from the Flint Journal and placed the memo on the top of my dad’s inbox.
A week later, I found the memo in my inbox. “Approved,” my dad had written across the memo. He had signed his name and dated it. Neither my mom nor my dad ever discussed the idea with me. But two weeks later, dressed in my candy striper uniform, I filled ice buckets, delivered mail to rooms, straightened sheets, and talked with patients.
At twelve, I had seen the power of the memo.
When I left home, I sometimes wondered how my dad managed his office without me, realizing only gradually that my hours of deskwork in his office were as much for my benefit as his.
These days, I’m in my dad’s office almost every day. He no longer has an inbox for me. But he might as well. Because there’s a corner of his desk where he piles the papers we need to talk about.
“You’ve got a sense about things,” he said to me the other day.
And if I do, he’s the reason why.


