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Grocery Night

On Thursday evenings, all was right with the world

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I was usually the first one to open the Snyders of Berlin chips. And as I tore open the heavy foil bag, my senses were overcome by the smell of freshly fried chips. I’d load them into a few bowls and set them on the tables.

And there sat my sisters and my parents, watching “The Waltons,” eating the finest chips ever made, sipping our soda and feeling safe and secure.

It was Thursday, after all, and the weekend was soon to come. The house was loaded to the hilt with food, which was always a fine feeling. My mother and father were together and with us and all was right with the world.

I didn’t know then how lucky I was to know such security. I didn’t know that my happiness was a result of two people who put their children’s needs so far before their own that we didn’t know they had needs.

What a tremendous impediment we must have been to their comfort.

But I know it now. And I know how important my father was to my happiness and security.

Unlike too many fathers today — unlike the bumbling idiots portrayed on television — my father was a firm. He was demanding of us, but that is what we craved. He wasn’t much good at telling us he loved us, but he was a master at showing us his love through repeated actions.

I’m no expert on parenting or fatherhood, but at 50, I know this:

When I open a bag of Snyder of Berlin potato chips, I am filled again with the security and happiness that I felt so long ago because my mother and father were putting my needs first.

A prior version of this column was distributed by Cagle Cartoons in 2006. It is an excerpt from Tom Purcell’s new book, “Misadventures of a 1970s Childhood,” available at amazon.com.

©2013 Tom Purcell

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