There's just something about a daddy.

If mom is sustained, lasting light, dad is a spark. It's certainly
true in my family, where the men simply produce a different kind of
energy. Dads and Grandpas are wonderfully familiar but, at the same time,
exotic.

Some of my most vivid memories from childhood took place during weekend
car rides, just me and my Dad. They are engraved in my memory not because
we did anything particularly exciting or adventurous - these were mostly
just weekly errands, with the occasional stop at a donut shop. And it
wasn't the conversation; we didn't talk a whole lot. There was just something
different about being with him.

It's that way in the family I've created, too. For my daughters, Cassie and Calliope, Daddy is an exclamation point at the end of each day.

I'm sure two-year-old Cassie doesn't know how to tell time, but at precisely 6:30 every weeknight, she's got her nose pressed against the glass, waiting
for daddy's truck to rumble up the driveway.

Calliope, almost three months old, coos and grins at me all day, but
when Dad comes home, her muscles start to work. She starts making little
jabs with her arms and legs. Her mouth forms an o-shape. She's a picture
of pure concentration.

When my daughter and I were living with my parents awaiting Calliope's birth,
Grandpa would announce his arrival each evening with two quick honks.
"Grandpa! Grandpa!" Cassie would run to the door so fast that her socks
would send her sliding across the linoleum.

The wide-eyed way Cassie looks at the men in her life just melts my heart.
I can only imagine what it does to them. Like most toddlers, her whole face
has a feeling, not just her mouth.

I wonder how things would change - with our husbands, our fathers, our
mothers, our children, our friends - if we all greeted one another like
this. If we carried this intensity into all of our relationships. If we
ran so fast we slid to greet the important people in our lives.

A recent Oprah episode had Toni Morrison asking, "Do your eyes light up
when your children come into the room?" Because that's what they are looking
for, she said.

I find myself reflecting on that wisdom frequently. Because isn't that what
we're all looking for?

Today, see if you can make sure someone finds it.

Author's Bio: 

About the author:
Susie Michelle Cortright is the author of More Energy for Moms - http://www.momscape.com/energy - and founder of two "just for you"websites: Momscape.com, designed to help busy women find balance, and BestSelfHelp.com, devoted to helping you find the most effectivepersonal growth tools.

Visit http://www.momscape.com today and get Susie's course-by-email "6 Days to Less Stress" free. And visit http://www.bestselfhelp.comfor free self-help classics.