It was just before noon when I got a voicemail from a man I didn’t know.
“I’ve been renting an apartment for the last three and a half years to your father and he is very ill,” the man said after giving me his name. “He’s being transported currently to Regional Medical Center in Anniston and the EMTs that are here believe that he’s passing away.”
I’ve been estranged from my father for most of the last decade, but this is a call nobody wants to receive. He has no family left and he’s all alone in what might be his final hours or days. I felt very conflicted about what to do. As I thought about it, my mind returned to an incident from my childhood.
I was about 5 years old when a drunk man ran a stop sign and hit our car. I was the only one injured. We were traveling from Birmingham back to Atlanta, where we lived at the time. We were about an hour east of Birmingham on U.S. 78 in Anniston. I had been next to my father in the front seat. When we were hit, the force of the impact knocked me into the dashboard.

After years of wasting my life, sands of time are slipping away
Friday nights still take me back to sidelines of high school football
It’s when we create art — and create a better world — that we’re most like our Creator
Each unexpected death forces me to confront limits of my own life
Your motivations tell me more about you than your actions do
God watches humanity’s struggle and says, ‘You’re doing it wrong’
There are times we need to quit; what do you need to quit today?
If you live by your principles, others won’t control your actions