Fathers & Sons: the Bonding Process   
              
   
       
 
              
   
       
by Bill Hanson 
   
   
       
 
  
    
Over     
the years, Bill Hanson has taken pictures of fathers and sons. Not until his father's     
death did he begin to appreciate that his father was his whole world. "The     
bond between fathers and sons",     
says Hanson, "can     
be celebrated, cursed, strained, ridiculed, and honored. However, it can not be   
broken."     
The following is a moving story told by Hanson about the father-son relationship.  
  
  
 
 
     As far as I am concerned, my 
father was the finest man who ever lived. William Andrew     
  Hanson II was my hero -   
John Wayne, Audie Murphy,     
  and Joe DiMaggio all rolled into one. He was equal parts friends, mentor, and     
  confidant. We spoke without words and loved without barriers. 
    
    He grew up without a father, who died when Dad was only     
  10 years old. Life must have been     
  lonely for a boy losing his father at such a young age, but Dad never wallowed     
  in self-pity. He was independent and strong, a stubborn individualist. I   
don't know who taught him how to be a father, but he learned the lessons well.     
  
    
    It wasn't easy for my parents to raise three boys. As I     
  grew older, it was obvious that money wasn't plentiful, but Dad never lost his     
  enthusiasm for living. Even our simplest conversations were painted with smiles.   
"Dad," I would say, about to ask to borrow his hammer     
  or pose some mundane question, and he would look up from his work and say in     
  his unique way, "Yessiree, Bob-tailed,     
  Buffalo     
  Bill, Leroy Hanson the Third."  
   
    He had a real    
  way with words and instilled in me an appreciation and knowledge for language.    
  If you asked him the meaning of a word, he could tell you the complete   
     
  of it. Sometimes, lessons came when I least expected them.     
  In high school, I brought a date home to meet my father. Trying to impress her,     
  or just being a teenager, I was sneering and being insulting to just about everyone     
  in the room. Dad finally said, "Bill, I want you to go over to my dictionary     
  and tell me what the word ‘sarcasm' means."     
  He said it in such a commanding tone, I didn't resist. I     
  flipped open the page and found the literal meaning -   
to     
  rip flesh. In one single moment, he taught me the power of words. I haven't     
  forgotten it. 
    
     The day he died was the hardest day of my life. My     
  world had hinged on him. No person had loved me the way he did -  
unconditionally. I began to appreciate how lonely he must     
  have been when his own father died. Without Dad, I thought the hope in me had     
  died as well. Our friendship spoke to my soul, and now the conversation was     
  over. 
    
    Becoming a father myself wasn't high on my list of things     
  to do. I had a sense that someday it would happen, but not in the immediate     
  future. Dirty diapers and responsibilities were not my idea of a good time.     
  Almost a decade after my father died, an infant changed my mind. His name is     
  Miles Christopher Hanson. 
    
    When I think about my life today, I see it as before child     
  and after child. Being a father means there are new challenges for me. I must     
  be prepared to meet obstacles I never knew existed and keep one step ahead of     
  my growing boy's needs. 
    
    There was no school degree to prepare me for fatherhood.     
  I went to the bookstores and scoured the shelves for something that would give     
  me a recipe for being a good father. I found nothing. Here I was, endeavoring     
  to take on the biggest commitment of my life, and I had no lines, no textbook,     
  no videos to tell me what to do. It was a job with no description. People would     
  say to me, "Just love him."   
Loving was the easy part.     
  Being a father was not. 
    
     I was terrified the first time I held this small, pink,     
  wrinkled bundle in my arms, the first time I gave him a bath, the first time     
  we were alone together. All I could do was remember my own childhood and realize     
  that my father had been my world. It was the best advice I found. Slowly, I     
  began to realize that I had been Miles'   
world. I just     
  started taking my cues from him and we did okay together. In fact, now we are     
  inseparable. 
    
    If I am mowing the lawn, Miles mows the lawn. If I am reading     
  the paper, Miles reads the paper. If I am thirsty, so is Miles. He is imitating     
  my steps as I once copied my own father's. Here is the cycle of life. We learn     
  from our fathers so we can teach our children.
  
     
    
    Miles taught me that the hope my father had in abundance     
  did not die with him. When I look at Miles, I know what my father saw in me     
  - hope for a better future. I wish there were a way     
  to share with my father his precious grandson. Fate didn't see it that way.     
  My mother married again, and now both Miles and I benefit from a caring stepfather.     
  We have developed a father and son bond based on love, mutual admiration, and     
  respect. My stepfather has been there for me as father, friend, and counselor.     
  He also had taught me that fathers and sons don't necessarily have to share     
  flesh and bones. A father is someone who is willing to claim a son as his own     
  and take the responsibility of that relationship. I am fortunate to have his     
  influence in my life. 
    
     Being a father (parent) is - let's     
  face it - a pretty thankless job. In today's media,     
  the only fathers we see are the "deadbeat" dads. Where     
  are the millions of men who toil day after day, sacrificing their own needs     
  in order to fulfill the needs of their family? Those men are out there, but     
  there are no rewards. Think about it, when the cameras  the      
  at a sporting event, do you hear "Hi, Dad?"     
  No - moms get all the credit.  
    
    Over the years, I have taken pictures to salute the men     
  who are raising the next generation of fathers. They are redefining what it     
  is to be a father. I consider the relationship between mother and child equally     
  significant. In fact, Miles has a great relationship with his mother, as I do     
  with mine. Nevertheless, the photos are designed to encompass the relationship     
  between father and son. As fathers, old expectations were to protect, discipline,     
  and provide for their offspring. Today, society expects and needs men to be     
  more involved. The question is how. 
    
    Each father and son team I have portrayed has found common     
  ground in their relationship. Some fathers are in the wonderment phase -     
  seeing the world through the eyes of their growing sons.     
  Others are watching their sons cope with the demons of today. One or two fathers     
  are discovering their sons. Some sons are fatherless, and some fathers are sonless.     
  There are fathers who have watched their sons combat a fatal disease, others     
  who have watched their sons grow into successful businessmen. Some of the fathers     
  have been primary caregivers to their sons, while others have felt the pain     
  of seeing their offspring grow up in a distant city because of divorce. One     
  of the fathers talks of sharing the moment of winning a world championship title     
  with his son, and another writes of reading Goose Bumps to his sons each evening.     
  Fathers talk about newborns entering the world and about coaching Little     
  League, of sons marrying and having their own sons, and of the passing of     
  tradition. Each has taught by example and each has loved unconditionally.
    
    I hope that, through my photos, you will see men who are     
  doing their best for their sons. You'll also see sons who are making their fathers     
  proud - not because they are presidents, star athletes,     
  millionaires, or celebrities, but because, at one point in history, a man had     
  a son, and that son had a father who became his whole world. They learned from     
  each other, laughed with each other, argued with each other, and loved. The     
  bond between fathers and sons is unbreakable. It can be celebrated, cursed,     
  strained, ridiculed, and honored. However, it can not be broken. 
    
    (1330 words)
    
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