#FathersDay #Grief #Legacy #OneMoreHour #CherishYourParents #LossAndHealing #Faith #FamilyLove

One More Hour With My Daddy: A Father’s Day Reflection on Love, Loss, and Imperfection

Who would you like to talk to soon?

“Grief is learning to hold love and pain at the same time.”

It’s Father’s Day.

My daddy & baby me

For many, this is a day of celebration—cards exchanged, phone calls made, backyard barbecues enjoyed. Social media overflows with smiling photos of fathers and children, laughter echoing across timelines. But for some of us, Father’s Day feels much different. It’s quieter. Heavier. For us, our fathers aren’t here to celebrate with us anymore.

My daddy is in heaven.

And on days like this, a simple wish presses against my heart:
If only I had one more hour with him.


The Ache of Longing

I dream of one more hour to sit beside him, hear his voice, and feel his strong arms wrap me in a hug — though I was never one to enjoy hugs much, a tender irony that adds weight to my longing. I yearn simply to exist in his presence once more.

This isn’t a passing sadness. It’s a physical ache that sits tightly in my chest. The ache is always near: when I see fathers with their children, when family milestones pass without him, when I glance at the box of his ashes resting quietly on my dresser. That little box is both a reminder of his absence and proof of his enduring presence in my life.

Even in the day-to-day, his absence echoes. My eldest child’s graduation, my 8th grader’s prom, my niece twirling in princess dresses—all these moments carry his absence. But perhaps the most vivid reminder is my youngest son, who is my father’s spitting image: his face, his gait, his quiet wisdom that seems far older than his years. Every time I see my son, it’s like seeing my daddy once more—and that beauty makes the pain even sharper.


The Weight of What Was Left Unsaid and Undone

Grief is rarely about what happened. Often, it’s about what didn’t happen—the conversations never had, the lessons left untaught, the wisdom left unshared.

As I’ve grown older, I’ve come to love working with my hands, much like my father—a skilled carpenter who took pride in building and fixing. So many times I’ve wished he were here to guide me—whether through home repairs, car issues, or simply knowing who to trust. This isn’t about traditional roles or being “ladylike.” It’s about the practical wisdom only a father could share, and that now feels forever out of reach.

His life was complicated, layered with both growth and imperfection. My daddy wasn’t a perfect man, but he grew in profound ways—especially in how he treated women after having daughters. I watched him grow, even as I watched him endure a toxic marriage to his third ex-wife.

I’ll never forget the day she shut off his phone service because he questioned her late-night behavior, cutting him off from us when he needed us most. After his passing, I stumbled upon scriptures that seemed to describe her manipulations, and family members confirmed much of what I feared. She was a traumatized soul who used his kindness for her own gain. And though I wish I had intervened more, I was fighting my own battles at the time—trapped in a toxic relationship that stole much of my own strength.

But nothing weighs on me like the health regrets.

I had a small inkling that something was wrong with his health—a nudge, a quiet unease. But I allowed others to talk me out of it, choosing to believe everything was fine. When he was hospitalized, I didn’t call—not because I didn’t care, but because I truly believed he was coming home. I was preparing my house for his recovery, never imagining he wouldn’t make it home. That missed call now lives with me, a painful wound I revisit often. One more conversation, one more “I love you”—it slips further out of reach with each passing day.


The Frustration and Anger: Grappling with “Madness”

Grief is never tidy. Love and frustration can exist in the same breath.

After his death, I found myself drowning not only in grief but also in frustration. His affairs weren’t in order. His vulnerability to scams left us with unexpected messes to clean up. The administrative burden he left behind was overwhelming—adding financial stress to our already heavy hearts.

And then there was COVID. My father refused the vaccine, choosing blind faith over science. His unwavering belief that God alone would protect him collided painfully with my fear for his health. This wasn’t about politics. It was about wanting him safe. Watching him make that choice — a choice that ultimately cost him his life — filled me with helpless anger that still rises uninvited.


Holding the Complexity: Love, Loss, and Imperfection

Time has taught me to sit with all the complexities.

I love my father deeply, even while acknowledging his flaws.
I honor his legacy, while recognizing his mistakes.
Furthermore, I carry sadness, frustration, regret, and deep gratitude—all at once.

His legacy lives on in countless ways:

  • The foundation of faith he instilled in us.
  • A strong family culture that values education and lifelong learning.
  • Hard-learned lessons on how to prepare well for those you leave behind.
  • The unity my siblings and I displayed in honoring his final wishes.
  • His reflection in my children — both in appearance and spirit.

I honor him daily—through the businesses I’m building, the law degree I am pursuing (a promise I made to him), and my walk with Christ that remains the center of my life.

And perhaps the most healing shift has been learning to let myself feel. I no longer bottle up my grief. When it rises, I sit with it, cry if I need to, and release it. I allow every emotion to pass through me—knowing that feeling my grief is also feeling my love.


A Heartfelt Plea: Cherish Your Dad

As Father’s Day arrives, I have one plea for anyone reading this:

  • Cherish your father.
  • Ask him for his story. Remember, your parents lived entire lives before you came into existence.
  • Value the time you have.
  • Understand that time is borrowed, and tomorrow is not promised.

If I had one more hour, I would hold his hand, listen to his voice, and say everything I wish I had said. Since I no longer have that hour, I carry him within me—in my heart, in my children, and in the life I continue to build.

This Father’s Day, may we all hold our fathers a little closer—whether in our arms or in our hearts.

A throwback to my dad’s fav dinner he would make
EssieB in stxingkai font

Jill of a lot of trades

What jobs have you had?

A jack of all trades is a master of none, but oftentimes better than a master of one” Author Unknown

Jill of All Trades and Master of… Enough

I come from a line of women who wore many hats before it became a trendy thing to say. Women who didn’t need business cards to prove their skills. They just did. My grandmothers and aunties could cook a whole feast, sew you a dress, press your hair, run a juke joint, manage money from the numbers game, and still show up with their heads held high. They were resourceful, resilient, and sharp—and that spirit runs through me.

So yes, I’m a Jill of all trades. It’s not a joke or a side comment—it’s a legacy.

I’ve been many things in this life. I’ve worked in fast food—Taco Bell, Wendy’s, Potbelly’s. I scooped ice cream in a corner store, made plates at a soul food carry out, cleaned buildings as an environmental specialist at Howard University. And for the past sixteen years, I’ve been working as an escrow officer and title manager in the real estate title insurance field.

I’ve started multiple microbusinesses—some fizzled, some paused, and one was really taking off until life brought a storm. I lost my father. The world shut down. Dreams had to be folded and stored away for a while. But I never stopped dreaming. Never stopped creating.

In the background, I was helping build other businesses—my ex-husband’s ventures, friends’ side projects. Always the behind-the-scenes glue holding things together.

And now? Now I’m leaning fully into what sets my soul on fire.
I’m making music.
I’m writing—blogging like this, sharing my journey and my truth.
I’m creating content that feels like me.
And I’m launching my own online storefront, a space for the things I’ve made and believe in.

There was a time I felt ashamed of this path. Like I was all over the place, with no clear direction. No degree to fall back on. Just experience. Just intuition. Just grit. And for a while, I believed that wasn’t enough. I believed the world when it told me I needed to follow a script that was never written for someone like me in the first place.

But now? I’ve come to understand that what I once saw as scattered was actually rich. Layered. Full.

Every job, every skill, every twist in the road—it was all part of preparing me for this season. For my next act. For something that looks like wholeness.

So when people ask me, “What jobs have you had?” I smile. Because I’ve done a little bit of everything. And in doing all of that, I found myself.

I may not be a “master” by the textbook definition. But I’ve mastered showing up. I’ve mastered rebuilding. I’ve mastered holding space for growth and grace and still making time for joy.

This post isn’t just a look back—it’s also a quiet heads-up that there’s more coming. More music. More writing. More creations made with love.

If you’ve connected with any part of my journey, feel free to explore what I’m building:

I’m not just a Jill of all trades. I’m a woman walking fully in her purpose, bringing all those trades along with her.

EssieB in stxingkai font