This is a re-post of something I wrote several years ago for Father’s Day. I think this Father’s Day weekend is a good time to share it again, and now is a good time to celebrate and appreciate God’s gift of manhood.
It has often become an annual tribute to my husband, as we were married on Father’s Day weekend in 1976. He has been the best of husbands, and such a wonderful father, and now grandfather.
A man who excelled at being a father, and especially when the going got tough. Our boys were rowdy and rough. Tough, they came from wild Irish stock with independent streaks and hard heads. All things needed in good, strong men, but characteristics that must be guided, tempered, molded.
My husband, coming from a family of eight kids, with four brothers of his own, and a dad who also had a spine of steel, had plenty of experience to call on as we raised our boys, thank God.
And so, again today, I give thanks for the wonderful gift God gave us in men, especially my own, as my own sons are now fathers.
48 years ago Wednesday, I was blessed to marry the most wonderful man in the world. From the time I met him, just before I turned 18, he became the yardstick I measured all men by. He’s never failed to keep that bar high.
He inspired this post. I love him with all my heart. He has my respect, my loyalty, my admiration. He deserved the best of wives in return, but never complained about settling for me.

26 God said, ‘Let us make man in our own image, in the likeness of ourselves, and let them be masters of the fish of the sea, the birds of heaven, the cattle, all the wild animals and all the creatures that creep along the ground.’
27 God created man in the image of himself, in the image of God he created him, male and female he created them.
I had an experience this weekend that made me think about men, about masculinity. It seems manhood is under attack these days from many directions. Indeed, in my opinion, a part of what so offends so many people about President Trump, especially liberals and sissy Never Trumpers is his unapologetic masculinity. He is a man who knows his power and embraces it.
That being said (and I can’t believe I put it in here, knowing where it could lead) please don’t make this another political free for all. My point here is broader. I’m asking you to take your politics to the presidential thread. I’ll trash any off topic conversations or the whole post if needed.
To all you guys out there, tough guys, whether you express that inner strength clad in a business suit or well worn jeans and work boots, please accept the appreciation and approval of those of us who celebrate who and what you are, and what you do. Every day in ways large and small, you go out and just get the job done. You don’t ask for approval, thanks, or cheers, because it just wouldn’t occur to you, and you are too busy getting things done to stop for recognition.
Lots of feminists have a problem with men. I believe they throw around terms like patriarchy, which they probably never looked up in their Funk and Wagnalls. Some women, and even a few men, appear to be threatened by the reality of masculinity.
Get a grip chicks, if you are really okay with who and what you are, men are not a threat, but a gift, not competition, but complementary. If your “feminine power” must be derived from the destruction of the epic event of God’s creation, you are pathetic already and men have nothing to do with that failure, you own it.
I’m not even going to waste breath here encouraging men to not allow women to define their masculinity. He who does that is already beyond my poor advice.
All ages, sizes, colors, and other assorted variations. You were different from the moment of conception, and thank God for that. As a child you were faster, stronger, dirtier, and louder. You were often fearless while I stood beside you weighing the odds and assessing the situation. You climbed the tree while I looked for the ladder. You snuck out with the family car while I was cajoling dad for the keys.
In my day, back in the Dark Ages, as we grew into teens and young men and women, some of you actually appreciated my femininity and rewarded me with attention and admiration. Many of you were kind enough to open doors for me, walk alongside the curb beside me, and lift heavy objects before I tried to. You paid the bill for our dates, and if you ever wanted another one, you walked me to the door.
Because God is good, and loving, and gives us abundant graces and good things, in the early days of my womanhood, I fell in love with this wondrous creature God made from dust and clay. That right there ought to be a hint to us, man from dirt, earthy, strong, fundamental. But, I digress.
I married a man. A for real and not apologizing for it man. He has muscles and strength and brawn and intelligence and toughness, a toughness that nothing in this world has ever even come close to breaking. Not even a little crack. Not once in all our years has he ever even paused in the face of terrible trials and hardships. Now, I know him. I know that he isn’t a robot and he isn’t superman. Sure he’s had doubts, fears, and moments of desperation.
He never once, not one time, not ever, considered giving in to them. On his shoulders landed the burdens that would have crushed me and our family without him. God alone knows the weight he bore. His faith was apparent and he led our family to church, led us in faith and worship. The kind that isn’t really so much talked about as lived.
So today, as we honor fathers, I just wanted to throw out a little appreciation for men. I pray that as the world turns and we learn from our mistakes, someday it is popular and honored for men to be men again. Soldiers, sailors, welders, business men, salesmen, teachers, pipefitters, mechanics, electricians, truck drivers, nurses, doctors, lawyers, preachers, rabbis, priests. Fathers, husbands, sons.
Thank you, God, for making men. Thank you for making them in your image. Thank you for all the wonderful men you gifted us with, especially your Son. Thank you for fathers who tirelessly protect and defend families, and not just their own. We pray that you sustain them each day and reward the fruits of their labor with strong families fit to handle the terrible troubles we face.
Happy Father’s Day guys, from the Treehouse to all of you.
Very touching! My father taught me the value of self-esteem. His lesson has served me well.
my dad was All American (Tight End, 1952, 1953, William and Mary) and as masculine as it gets
he wasn’t perfect, but I have a thousand questions I would love to ask him – he departed this mortal coil in 2012
Forty years married to a real man. Always there when needed, opens the door for me, says God bless you when I sneeze, loves our precious dog, strong to the core. Thank you God for him and his masculinity.
Any words I could write for Father’s Day would pale to those in the eulogy Fr Ripperger delivered on the occasion of his own father’s funeral. I won’t preface his beautiful homage given at his most sorrowful moment…
Except to say that his defining of manhood and fatherhood is deeply, spiritually impactful and has left an indelible mark on me ever since I read them. I pray that those who also read this beautiful tribute will be as moved as I was. There is a transcript as well as a video of his delivery.
For all fathers today, for those who have gone before, and for those who will come after us.
God bless and keep them all in His loving care forevermore.
https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/fr-ripperger-defines-the-greatness-of-manly-virtue-and-fatherhood-at-his-dads-funeral/?utm_source=news&utm_campaign=usa
Many years ago I made a clay lion for my Dad for father’s day. It was never fired, but he mounted it on a piece of wood and he kept it until it crumbled.
And I bet his heart broke when it did, Liz.
Your love for him never crumbled! God bless you!
Beautiful!
And thank you. I never heard this from Fr. Ripperger.
You’re most welcome, dear Quoheleth. I found it last year in August…too late for last Father’s Day. I bookmarked and have guarded it like the precious treasure it is for this day. Blessings to you, girl, and to all whom you love 🕊💕
While you may consider yourself lucky to have found your husband, it seems to me that he was equally lucky to have found you.
Thank you for a wonderful post. Happy Father’s Day to you and all other folks at CTH.
Hear, hear! What I wouldn’t give to tell my Daddy one more time how I love him and how I appreciate all of his hard work and sacrifice.
🎯❤️
A spine of steel. Most people can’t understand that. It’s almost a curse but it keeps the world running.
Menagerie, you have crafted the most beautiful statement of what marriage is all about. It is not just the man being what he must be at all times, it is also about the woman being what she must be at all times. That is the bond that actually makes marriage a whole union throughout life, and was intended to continue every time a man and woman left their parents and “cleaved” to each other as a foundational unit for the posterity of mankind. My father taught me how to be a man, and my mother taught my sister how to be a woman. And our family has been the stronger because of it. We will celebrate 52 years of marriage in two weeks, and through it all, my wife and I have learned the real value of what it was all about. Praise God for the real gift HE has given us for true happiness! Thank you Menagerie for your amazing statement, and let Sundance know that this is the reason his strength and resolve is the anchor that holds us as subscribers to this site! God has blessed you both, and it will last for an eternity! And the impact and value of your work will be there for all who seek it!
What a lovely living tribute you are to your parents, Recordtimes. May you and your beloved wife enjoy many more years together…a perfect matched pair.
((Just a quick note to tell you that Menagerie is not married to Sundance. I made this assumption a while back myself. They are dear, firm, long time friends who keep our Tree watered and thriving. Where a would we all be without them and Ad rem, Stella, and Wee??💕)
Wow! Thank you for letting me know. My respect for both Menagerie and Sundance just grew 5 more steps with that disclosure! It reveals what truly solidifies this nation and the heart of it, our families, in that, from the Founders up till now, it has always been about the freedom of raising our families and protecting it at all costs. God bless you and your family, dear Betsy, and thank you. I had to fight back some teary eyes just to type this response. And thank God for men, and women, Ish and Ishsha, as God called us, who are the image of our Creator, the Word! John 1:1.
Oh Recordtimes…what a generous reply! We are a family here I have always thought. Never more so than on these special days when Menagerie shares her beautiful posts which give us a chance to get to know one another more deeply than through our normal back and fros on other threads. Priceless.
Thank you so much from my heart to yours 💕
Well, thank you for your thoughts about us Guys.
I too am happy God made Men… otherwise, what’s would we do on Father’s Day? Who’d buy all those wonderful tools? What would I be? A nice mid modern dining room chair?
We’re vacationing in the Old Country… and we found out that my paternal great grandfather left me more cousins I can count. Most of them are guys, and a few ladies too. So, our food bill is far lower than expected, we just buy the wine and they feed us… and God, how they feed us.
The guy cousins are all good people, men as you note, not flakes. BIG FAMILY. Funny as he!! too. So, now I know where I got my twisted sense of humor.
However, I must note that that my women cousins, nieces, etc… are also all awesome. A wonderful mixture of strength, humor, intelligence, generosity and wonderful femininity. Just like my mom and grandmother and all the aunts. Unfortunately that generation is gone…. WE are now the “uncles”.
It is my opinion that it takes a strong woman to make a strong man. It’s just a different type of strength. I’d say men have stress strength while women have tensile strength. Different kinds, but it makes for a combined strength that’s not brittle and is both flexible and tough as needed.
It is also my opinion that while guys like to take the straight line, women will meander a bit more… which works great, as while us guys will sometime run into a wall, the ladies will find the way around.
We definitely need each other! Like they say, it takes two to tango.
It takes a strong woman to know when to get rid of the weak men, and keep the family strong. Weeding out the bad apples. Fine with me, as I believe I’ve passed that particular test many, many times. Wouldn’t have it any other way.
We celebrate Ladies Day 365 days a year… just so happens that we have a Tool Sale day once a year… 😉
Unfortunately, I’m gonna miss this year’s sale, I’ve been looking at a good track saw… 60V battery.
Oh, our kids are doing fine.. One is getting married next month… I’m positive he’ll make a great dad when his time come… and my daughter will make an awesome mom too.
Oh, you’d love my cousins. They are a hoot… and work hard too.
Happy mom’s day to you too. Seems like your hubby is very lucky too. 😉
My father was an air traffic controller in WWII. He was very involved in the D-Day invasion. He taught us to never curse and always be honest. What always struck me the most about him was that he was a true gentleman! I wish I could have married a gentleman like him, but sadly, my ex-husband was most definitely not.
Thank you, Menagerie for the reminder. I, too, have experienced the joys of a grandfather, father, husband and son. Each was masculine, complex, loving, irritating and totally male.
All of them are gone. On this special day, I honor them. I celebrate all my relationships with male friends and colleagues. God bless you, each and everyone!
Lorrie, you must feel this day very deeply and with a mixture of sorrow and gratitude.
My own husband’s father was his best friend, and I attribute what he is to the man who never steered him off straight paths in post WWII Britain. They were as poor as proverbial church mice, but the family never lacked for the things which count in this life. When material possessions rust and decay, those qualities take on a patina which only becomes more beautiful and richer with age.
We have a very close friend, a colleague of my husband’s and his first boss from the upmarket automobile dealership where they worked.
This man heard the call from Christ to serve in his Catholic Church and so embarked on a five year journey to his ultimate consecration as a deacon. Yesterday we received a profoundly moving message from him for Father’s Day…
And this is how my husband responded to it…
“I am the son of a fine man.
He taught me.
I honoured him.
He corrected me.
I honoured him.
He protected me.
I honoured him.
Jack was his name.
He had the heart of a lion yet the gentility of a lamb.
I loved him and I miss him.”
Blessings and comfort I pray for you always, dear friend 🕊💕
💞
Betsy, you are a master of the heart strings! So well said!
What a beautiful and touching Father’s Day tribute. Thank you for posting.
Thank you.
John 14:15 If you love me, keep my commandments. We must live by example. I gave my father’s eulogy a couple of years ago. He was humbled in his old age. He lost his mobility and became incontinent, and yet he exhibited gentleness and appreciation. He loved his family. It would have been easy to become bitter, for a man to have his diaper changed is not what a man should have to endure, but that cross he bore with grace and frequently remarked; I used to change your diapers and now you change mine, thank you. A father is never too old to teach.
Thank you for this. It will be saved and shared within my own family and others, as well.
Every young woman should read this before walking down the aisle🙏🏻. Thanking God for the Fathers of this world and those who, while not being biological fathers, lead our families with a father’s heart. Happy Father’s Day to all of you men out there. One day isn’t nearly enough.🙏🏻❤️
It’s cool when a father pitches a perfect game on Father’s Day
https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2024/06/it_s_cool_when_a_father_pitches_a_perfect_game_on_father_s_day.html
I have long said that the sexes are not ‘opposite’, but complementary. Thanks for pointing that out.
Thank you, Menagerie! I just printed this for my hubs! Happy Anniversary, too! Believe it or not, our 19th wedding anniversary is tomorrow! I may not always comment, but I absolutely read and feel everything you post. Enjoy this beautiful day with your family and know there are a lot of us who still cherish the men God provided for us!!!
Thank you for this post. Men will crawl through broken glass for women like you. If only more women understood that.
Thank you.
la le athair Shona
Dia Duit ya’ll 🇺🇸🙏🏻🇺🇸
Thank you and God Bless you.
What a wonderful complement you are to Sundance! A marriage of wordsmiths!
Just to let you know…Sundance is not Menagerie’s husband.
True, lolli.
However, Menagerie may have clout enough 🤗
to get Sundance
to post some more photos for the
-Sundance Backside Calandar. 🤔
True 😂
Amen! Thank you for such a beautiful message Menagerie. You are speaking the truth, Men Are Good!
Happy Father’s Day Gentlemen
http://menaregood.substack.com
Happy Fathers Day to all you wonderful men out there!
My wonderful man last night, after working 10 hours in the brutal heat and sun, axe-split wood, mowed the yard, was on the phone praising our children, kissed me several times telling me how much he loved me! He got up early this morning, loaded the truck with the trash for the dump, and has gone to play tennis with a friend. I wished him Happy Fathers Day, and he completely forgot about it being his day!
I absolutely Love this man!
Menagerie, thanks.
What a very loverly picture. Beautiful.
Wonderful post Menagerie.
Happy Fathers Day to all the great guys out there.
Happy Fathers Day to all you Treepers’ dads, and all you dads!
Whenever my friends and I would go out, cruising or hanging out, or to party, my Dad would always say the same line as we left the house:
“Don’t stick any beans up your nose!”
We all thought it was cheesy, but we understood what he meant.
We may have smoked a lot of weed, which he was aware of — because of course he knew — and drank a lot of beers. But we never, ever, snorted, injected, popped pills, or — and for this I am most grateful for his repeated advice — experienced “boofing”.
So thanks, Dad!
Happy Father’s Dad to all the Dads world wide. To my Dad for raising me to love God Country and family. To my Husband love you more
Fifteen years ago my father passed away in his 103rd year.
I’ve missed him every day since.
A very beautiful and touching post, Menagerie!
My dad passed away and I miss his wry humor and antics. He was a veterinarian and loved all creation. A very gentle man. But with his gentleness, none of us his kids, boys and I, ever doubted who we were. We were God’s children first. My dad suffered in jail in Communism. I am glad he is not here to witness what he thought would be a free country for his children. He taught us to know truth and live it. Lies were not real.
God has revealed Himself as a Father to show us what it means to be one. A father protects, provides, helps grow, corrects and loves what was given to him. He always gives. All this is embedded in Creation. And I think this is why the evil one attacks the family so much-it is an image of the Triune God.
I miss my dad and wish I could hear his wisdom as i do chores on the farm. I miss my dad and his love, when patients don’t do well and question what I missed or did wrong. But I know that when I worship God at Holy Mass and in front of the Blessed Sacrament I am closer to him and to the Eternal Father than ever. And that’s what I’ll do today. Give thanks to the Almighty for my dad, mom, brothers and all the other father-like figures in my life.
A happy and blessed day to all you Fathers in the Treehouse!
Daddy’s hands by Holly Dunn is always a favorite of mine.
Lovely, and heartwarming.
Thank you.
100% Unlike you, I have married twice. Often I thank God for my adulterous first husband because that event gave me my forever husband. Mark, like my Dad, is a Vietnam veteran having served in the Air Force. (My wonderful father was a career USAF pilot.) After Vietnam, Mark went on to serve 33 distiguished years with LAPD. Mark is the man of my dreams, the prince of my heart, and the king in my world. He is my commander-in-chief!
Our pastor had some stats this morning about the other family members following Christ based on who in the family was first:
Child: 19% for other family members
Mother: 22% for other family members
Father: 94%!!!
The point being, whether positive or negative, a father has a big impact on the family.
As he went on he was talking about the tongue, where the Bible addresses our words. The positive words have a big impact.
I’ve caught myself doing it, he said we don’t need to prove how sharp our tongue is when challenging another’s opinion quoting Proverbs 15:
A gentle answer turns away wrath,
but a harsh word stirs up anger.
If anyone wants to hear his message, search Church of the Highlands (main campus is in Birmingham, AL) to see the service – they have built a large network of campuses in Alabama (and now Georgia) all without debt so they can better serve the community.
Inspiring post! Thank you!!
Happy Fathers Day!
Thank you Fathers!

Aaah, what a sweet woman you are, Nadji. What a lucky fellow your husband is
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=judy+collins+my+father&t=iphone&iax=videos&ia=videos&iai=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3Da60l8E1nXSA
-My Father
By: Judy Collins
Great post, dear… I post this not because I envision a dark place coming. Rather, a tribute to good men and fathers:
The Men Who Wanted to Be Left Alone
“The most terrifying force of death comes from the hands of Men who wanted to be left Alone. They try, so very hard, to mind their own business and provide for themselves and those they love. They resist every impulse to fight back, knowing the forced and permanent change of life that will come from it. They know that the moment they fight back, their lives as they have lived them, are over. The moment the Men who wanted to be left alone are forced to fight back, it is a form of suicide. They are literally killing off who they used to be. Which is why, when forced to take up violence, these Men who wanted to be left alone, fight with unholy vengeance against those who murdered their former lives. They fight with raw hate, and a drive that cannot be fathomed by those who are merely play-acting at politics and terror. True terror will arrive at these people’s door, and they will cry, scream, and beg for mercy… but it will fall upon the deaf ears of the Men who just wanted to be left alone.”
– Author Unknown
My Dad, was a nuclear physicists working on our nations most important weapons program in Livermore CA. Yet he was home at 5:30 pm every day. He was at every one of mine and my siblings sport practices and games, it was my father that got the entire family into dirt motorcycles and the family club we camped with every month for years. My Dad was a very smart man that loved blue collar things, blue collar people and blue collar toughness. The most humble, sincere and normal person ( and my mom too). He was a fearless man and a logical man. And from the moment I can recollect as a child I knew implicitly he was my hero. I’d willingly become penniless and destitute for just 5 minutes with my Dad.
Sweet and poignant. My dad served in WW ll on an island in the Pacific. Tough but sweet guy.
Happy Father’s Day y’all!
The Patriarchy has brought us from the cave man and fire to electricity, skyscrapers, railroads, airplanes, autos, atomic fission, pasteurization, antibiotics, vaccines, indoor plumbing, motion pictures, sound recordings, television, computers and the smart phones. Your welcome!
Lovely post. I’m a father with 2 grown sons, a husband, 34 yrs and counting, and a son (97 yr old mother married over 50 yrs to a great, now deceased husband, my father. I believe I am a very fortunate man who has been blessed by Our Lord, and lucky in my parentage.
My own father was a sergeant air gunner in the Royal Canadian Air Force in WWII and a good Catholic gentleman. Not perfect, but a good man. I pray that at my funeral folks will say the same about me.
I am very blessed by my marriage and grateful for our two boys/now grown men. Both my grandfathers were Canadian army veterans in France in WWI. I had the honour of serving as an officer in the Canadian forces for 26 years. My working class family sacrificed so I could go to university. My youngest just graduated from university. Now in my 70s I look back on this Father’s Day and give thanks to Our Father in Heaven, the loving Father of all. Good fathers and mothers beget good sons and daughters. It is the result of God’s grace (with some hard work thrown in).
Thanks again for your post. It touched my heart and made me reflect.
I miss my Dad every day. He was my world. What I miss the most is his ability to tell me a solution even if it was really off base. He said something that made me hopeful or redirect me to an answer. My Dad loved me. I will forever be a Daddy’s girl.
He was not perfect and it did not matter. We were a team.
Beautiful and so much appreciated.
My Father was cut from the same cloth, all man and not apologetic about it. It was to his arms that we 6 children ran when hurt and he was who we called for when scared at night. He and my Mother were perfectly complimented, their marriage was an example set for all of us.
My Father died when he was only 67, but he remains in a special place in my heart that is reserved only for him.
Happy Father’s Day to all you fathers out there!
Thanks Menagerie….wonderfully written for celebrating Father’s Day.
Thank you, Menagerie, for the beautiful tribute. This old man is now an aging grandfather and I hope I have set a good example for the younger men and boys in my family. My own father was a quiet man who did not show his feelings and I think I’m a lot like him.
Your comment about the rashness of boys vs girls hit home. I have always said that boys are the do-ers and girls are the followers. At least that’s been my observation through the years. In my youth I always put girls and women on a pedestal in the belief that they are better people than us earthy men. Lately that image has been somewhat tarnished but your essay proves that my earlier opinions were accurate. Thanks again.
When my son was young, he attended a preschool that required parents to occasionally help the staff. One day, I was the parent helper and was helping with the boys. They were building a tower out of wooden blocks which they would then knock over and cheer. They did this several times and the teachers seemed to be getting annoyed with it. Of course, I was encouraging it🫢 At the same time, the girls were gathered around a table trying different costumes on and talking to one another. It was a stark reminder of the inherent differences between boys and girls. Anybody that thinks these differences are due to socialization are delusional. It’s sad that society is working so hard to feminize boys and masculinize girls. That is a recipe for disaster in my opinion.