My father, the man in front.

Honoring Beryl Donald Paullin (April 17, 1927 – September 15, 2017)

A Father’s Day Tribute

There are men who pass through the world quietly, leaving only the faintest impressions on those around them. My father, Beryl Donald Paullin, was not one of those men.

He was a force. A contradiction. A wound and a gift, wrapped together in the skin of a man who never quite figured out how to be tender without being sharp, or how to love without also leaving a mark. This Father’s Day, I want to honor him not as a polished idol, but as what he truly was — a profoundly human being whose complexity defied easy summary, and whose life has taken me a lifetime to begin to understand.

Born Into Fire

Beryl Donald Paullin arrived in 1927, in the depths of the Great Depression, into a home that offered little comfort and even less safety. His father — also named Beryl, but known to most as Bruce — was a Fire Chief, respected in the community, feared in the home. An abusive alcoholic whose violence shaped every relationship he touched, Grandpa Bruce cast a long, oppressive shadow over my father’s earliest years.

Dad kept my sister Pam and me away from Grandpa Bruce until we were teenagers. That says everything about the weight of that man’s presence, and everything about my father’s determination to protect us from what he himself had endured. When we did finally visit Bruce in his later, sober years, he seemed pleasant enough — a ghost of the brute my father had survived.

Dad’s mother, Elsie, was what he described simply as “the classic abused wife.” She suffered physically and emotionally, carrying wounds so deep they eventually hollowed her out. She died shortly after my own birth, and I have never truly known her — only the fragments my father carried, cautiously and rarely, like shards of something he was afraid to cut himself on again.

His older brother, Ed, was removed from the home at age six, after a near-fatal beating from their father. It was Susie — Dad’s younger sister — who carried a particularly poisoned story all the way to the end of my father’s life: that four-year-old Beryl, having accidentally knocked over a lamp and broken it, was responsible for triggering the attack that nearly killed Edward. This is the kind of story that trauma produces. This is the kind of blame that breaks a child and follows a man into his grave.

And yet — my father emerged. Scarred, yes. Carrying the invisible architecture of a fractured boyhood, certainly. But upright, and moving forward.

The Making of a Man

At sixteen, convinced he was a “dummy” with no future and desperate to escape the walls of his family home, Dad enlisted in the Marines. His mother promptly had him retrieved. Undeterred, he re-enlisted in the Navy the moment he turned eighteen, serving aboard the USS West Virginia and the USS Wisconsin. When he returned in 1947, he made one final reckoning with his father — standing before the man who had terrorized his family and issuing a quiet, unambiguous ultimatum: lay a hand on my mother again, and I will kill you.

He meant it. And his father believed him.

From there, Dad turned toward the life of the mind, enrolling at the University of Portland, where he studied Psychology, Logic, Metaphysics, and Philosophy of Mind. He wanted — more than almost anything — to understand the human condition. To decode the machinery of suffering. To find some rational framework for the chaos he had been born into. He didn’t finish his degree, but he never stopped asking the questions. In many ways, that search became the inheritance he passed to me.

He found his career at the U.S. Postal Service, where his perfectionism, discipline, and relentless work ethic carried him over thirty-five years to the role of Operations Manager. His drive was not ambition for its own sake — it was a daily act of rebellion against the narrative his father had tried to write for him. Every promotion was a refusal. Every accomplishment was a quiet declaration: I am more than what you told me I was.

His humor was never far from this undertow of defiance.
“I really took the system, didn’t I?” he would say — and the numbers proved him right. He contributed $22,742 to his pension, and drew over a million dollars back across thirty-five years of retirement. The grin that accompanied that observation was one of pure, unrepentant satisfaction.

The Man He Was — In His Own Words

No tribute to my father could approach honesty without his voice in it. My sister Pam, my wife Sharon, and I spent years collecting what we came to call the “Beryl-isms” — a catalogue of his most repeated expressions, aphorisms, provocations, and observations. They were, collectively, a kind of portrait of his inner world. He was a fountainhead of wit, wisdom, self-deprecation, sarcasm, and sometimes breathtaking philosophical candor.

Here, then, is my father — in his own words, with my replies where they belong:

“Don’t wait too long to retire. People think they need to work those extra years, they work that extra one or two years, thinking they need the money, and death takes over, and they never make it to retirement.”

(Well, Dad, I retired early. We’ll have to wait and see if that has any beneficial effect on my longevity. Right now, my main goal is to try to outlive you, oh immortal one.)

“Oh those rich people — all of that money, and they still have to die anyway!”
(And the rest of us have to die too, darn it.)

“Why do you need to know — are you writing a book?”
(Well, as a matter of fact, I am.)

“Come back again when you can’t stay so long.”
(I am working on that one.)

“Don’t you have something better to be doing?”
(Yes. But you are the priority of the moment, so try to enjoy it while I try not to suffer too much.)

“Sure am glad that I am retired. Or is it retarded?”
(I won’t touch that one.)

“I might be here, but I am not all here.”
(Then where is the rest of you?)

“You know, having a dog like Rocky adds seven years to my life.”
(Yes. But your dog took seven years off of mine.)

(To any waitress, without fail): “Say, you sure are looking good this evening. Would you like to come home with me and serve me my favorite meal?”
(Argh. So embarrassing.)

“I am not trying to be pretty, and I never will win any beauty contests.”
(I can’t argue with you on that one.)

“The doctor needed a urine, stool, and semen sample — so I just left him my underwear.”
(Oh, boy.)

“You couldn’t hit a beach ball with a banjo. You couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn!”
(This one was delivered to me as a child on the little league field, and again, decades later, on the golf course. Some things are consistent.)

“When I get to Heaven, I am going to have a talk with the ‘Old Man’ about my wife dying before me. Wives are supposed to outlive the husbands. Either I should have died first, or we should have died at the same time.”
(Maybe Mom finished her work before you did. In what form would you have wanted a simultaneous death — a murder-suicide, or a car wreck?)

“Son, will we all meet again in Heaven?”
(Are you sure you really want to hang out with the same crowd for eternity?)

“Heaven is not ready for me yet, and Hell is afraid that I will take it over — so that is why I am still here.”
(Maybe you are still here to provide a few more lessons for the living. I know I am getting quite the crash course.)

“I am in no hurry to die. Nobody I know has ever come back from the dead and told me what a great time they are having.”
(Yes — and wayward religions continue to capitalize on that mortal fear, ignoring the fact that heaven is here and now.)

“I provided care for you all of those years when you were young. Now it’s your turn to take care of this old man.”
(I should have read the contract more carefully before my birth.)

“You should always be best friends with your sister. Never let anything get in the way of that friendship — because she will find a way to love you to your death, as you should love her as well.”
(Well, Dad. You showed commitment to both your brother and your sister, especially over the last twenty years. Somehow, you all endeared yourselves to each other. Thank you for that.)

There are some who thought my father was a horse’s ass. But that is the view one sometimes gets when in second place, having been passed by his race horse of a mind.

The Homes He Built, The Ground He Loved

My father’s spirituality lived outdoors. He had no use for churches — “If I ever walked into one,” he said, “it would probably fall on me.” His sanctuary was the Columbia River Gorge, the Arizona desert, the mountain trail, the carefully tended garden. He built three homes over the course of his life, and at each one he devoted thousands of hours to transforming the surrounding landscape into something that could only be called a temple — not of doctrine, but of living. His body of work on this earth was his offering to whatever God he addressed only through beauty and dirt and the open sky.

He loved his dogs while my father, Heidi, Misty, Peaches, and Rocky with a kind of unconditional devotion that perhaps came more naturally to him than the complexities of loving people. He adored them. They returned his love without condition or complication, supplying the warmth that the harder arithmetic of human relationship sometimes failed to provide.

He was also, first while working at the USPS and in retirement, a square dancer, a stamp collector, a golfer, an avid fisherman, a camper, a traveler, a storyteller, and a humorist of the first order. He and my mother, Corinne — whom he loved deeply, if often unskillfully — carried their “verbal Punch and Judy Show” around the world. They drove through America, hiked in Costa Rica, cruised Alaska, wintered in Arizona, and celebrated their fiftieth anniversary on Maui. In retirement, he learned, slowly and imperfectly, to make her his best friend.

The Long Goodbye

After my mother died in 2009, something in my father began to dissolve. The grief was enormous, and the cognitive decline that had already been quietly setting in accelerated with a cruelty that felt almost deliberate. My wife Sharon and I had him over for dinner every evening. I took him to the doctor for depression — and the doctor ended up prescribing antidepressants for me instead.

By 2012, when his physician confirmed that he could no longer drive safely, my life as I had known it effectively ended. I became responsible for every dimension of his existence — his meals, his finances, his medications (none, as it turned out — he refused them all), his baths, his lawn, his spiritual wellbeing. He dressed himself. He smoked his cigars. He ate the food placed before him. He called out to his deceased dog Rocky — thirty times a day, every day, for the final year of his life — asking where the dog had gone.

We made a sign for him that said Rocky had died, had died of old age, was in heaven. He would read it, and five minutes later, call out again.

“You know, having a dog like Rocky adds seven years to my life.”
When Rocky died in June of 2016, the last thread connecting my father to his past was severed. I watched him grieve a loss he could not retain the memory of, over and over, an infinite loop of fresh sorrow. My heart broke for him — and breaks still.

The Last Conversation

Six hours before his death, I sat with my father in his room. It was a Friday afternoon, September 15, 2017.

“Dad, you are still in bed, and it’s 2:30 in the afternoon — what’s up? It’s such a beautiful day outside.”

“You know, son, I am always tired now. But I am about to get up.”

“Well, Dad — this might be the last sunny day in a long time. Why don’t you get up and go out on the porch and have a cigar? I’ll put a chocolate bar on your table, and a drink for you.”

“I’ll get right up, son. By the way — who is caring for me this evening?”

“Madison is caring for you this evening, Dad.”

“Oh, poor Madison!”

“Dad, Madison benefits by being with you. As you do with her.”

I told him I would be back Sunday morning, that I had to leave now to prepare for Marty’s funeral the following day. He asked when he would see me again.

“OK, son. You know that I am dependent on you. Please take care of yourself.”

“Oh, Dad — you know that I am dependent on you, too. You be careful.”

“I love you, son.”

“I love you too, Dad.”

I left his room not knowing it was our last exchange. The following morning, as I stood behind a hearse as a pallbearer at my dear friend Marty’s funeral, Sharon answered the phone I could not take.

My father was gone.

He died in his own bedroom, in his own home, on his own terms — which is precisely what he would have arranged, had he had any say in the matter. Those who came to his bedside reported that he had the look of awe and wonder on his face. He had found, at last, his promised land — where loneliness and dementia dissolve, and where battered souls are restored to the saints and angels they always were but were rarely recognized as being.

What He Left Behind

It took me nearly my entire life to release my own misunderstanding of my father. To stop seeing him through the lens of hurt and expectation, and to begin seeing him as a man — wounded, willful, brilliant, and trying, always trying, in the only ways he knew how. I was my father’s primary caregiver for his final years, and that experience nearly broke me. But in the breaking, something was born that I could not have found any other way.

I learned to love another human being, a being who had brought me so much beauty, stability, love, abuse and trauma and mixed messages about my value as a human being, unconditionally and completely.

The last lesson he taught me arrived not in any one conversation, but across thousands of days of sitting with him in his diminishment — releasing my anger, releasing my need for him to be different, releasing the version of him I had carried in my chest since childhood. What remained, when I finally let all of that go, was simple and irreducible: love.

My personality was so much less colorful than my father’s. I fashioned a quieter self, unconsciously, as a counterweight to his flamboyance — as if the world could only hold so much of that kind of energy. Perhaps I was wrong about that. I see now that I am, unmistakably, his son. I carry his curiosity, his irreverence, his refusal to accept the spiritual and philosophical authorities of the day, his search — ongoing, unfinished — for the truth about the human mind. Yet I found my truth, and I have completed a book of well over 300,000 words:

“An Electrician’s Guide To our Universe, and a Life, Love, and Death Upon Its Unlimited Bandwidth”

describing as best I can using the limited value of words what I have found. He would have loved reading it when he was younger.

My father found humor and cynicism to define what he had found. We will both be respected the same way after death, becoming …… forgotten and anonymous.

“Don’t wait too long to retire,” he told me, again and again.
I didn’t, Dad.
I retired to take care of you.
I retired to get in touch with myself, too.
And I would do it again.

For Father’s Day

There are some fathers who are easy to honor. Mine was not easy — but he was worth every difficult inch of the journey toward understanding him.

He was not an idol. He was a man forged in fire, shaped by trauma, and stubbornly, magnificently committed to living on his own terms. He was funny, difficult, tender in unguarded moments, sharp-tongued by default, and capable of a love that, once you understood its particular dialect, was entirely unmistakable.
“Heaven is not ready for me yet, and Hell is afraid that I will take it over.”

He was right, of course. Neither place was prepared. I was never prepared for him fully, no matter what spiritual state I occupied.

Beryl Donald Paullin, I miss you more than I have words for. Those who did not take the time to know you missed one of life’s most precious, complicated gifts. Those of us who stayed — who endured the rough edges, translated the barbs, sat beside you through the long unraveling of your final years — we were given something rare.

We were given you.

And Dad, I will love you until my final day.


Bruce Paullin

Born in 1955, married in 1994 to Sharon White