And then there were two…

It’s just my sister and me now. My father died peacefully in his sleep on August 21, 2023. Below is the eulogy I delivered at his funeral service today.


My late father, CMSgt Bob Huff

Writing Mama’s eulogy just six months ago was hard because my mother was part of my heart. To write those words was to admit she was no longer with us. I’m as much my Dad’s son as I was hers and this is tough for similar reasons—and also because you can’t do a man like Bobby Richard Huff justice in just a few hundred words. The poet Walt Whitman wrote of containing multitudes; if there was ever a man in my life who truly contained such multitudes, it was my Dad.

Bobby Richard Huff — Dad — was born in Franklin, Tennessee on June 25, 1936, just one day after his mother Mildred’s birthday. The Huffs — Granny Mildred, Grandpa Ben, Uncle Jackie, and Dad — lived in a tiny tenant farmer’s house on Caldwell Farm. Dad made it clear to me that he both hated and loved the place. In an autobiography he wrote for family, he described his favorite moments in that little house. It’s worth a quote, if only to admire the fact that Daddy had a bit of the poet in him:

“In the summer the heat was awful … The narrow windows were kept open but there was rarely enough breeze to move the curtains. The only relief came during those rare summer storms. The first hope came with the sound of distant thunder. If we were lucky enough to be in its path, the curtains would begin to move. We listened for those first loud drops on that hot metal roof. It would break suddenly with bright flashes of lightning and the roar of rain and thunder. Water poured from the roof and we kept tubs and buckets where we could catch it. The drops would splatter on the screens and send a fine spray over the linoleum floor. The rush of wind would cool that small house before the prop was taken out and the window dropped. That night sleeping would be good.”

Some of my favorite memories are of how my Dad related to his mother. Granny Huff was chatty, smart, sensitive, and sweet, and I think Dad was one of her favorite people to talk to. They had loud, rapid-fire conversations about everything, and they often consisted of Granny declaring an opinion or asking a question and Dad teasing her relentlessly but somehow gently for an hour. And Granny enjoyed every moment.

From them, I learned to love words and conversation and the times when our house was full of people making all manner of noise. When we gathered like that the house was full of joy. That was why when several people came to visit Dad in his final days in hospice, I didn’t ask anyone to speak softly. The conversation flowed, overlapped, grew loud. I believe Dad could hear us, and I believe he loved it. I only wished he could come back to his place as the biggest, most entertaining voice in the room.

Daddy graduated from Antioch High School, the Salutatorian of the class of 1954. However, just as my mother’s class of ’56 yearbook revealed her as “H for most Honest” in the senior alphabet, Dad was — to no one’s surprise — elected most talkative.

He married Margaret Lovene Lane on Dec. 1, 1956. My sister Sherry was born a year later, brother David the following year. Rhonda came later in July 1960, and then after a seven year break, Mama finally had a big-headed carrot top like her husband. That was me.

Daddy had joined the Air National Guard in 1954. He stayed in the service for 41 years, retiring as Chief Master Sergeant — the top noncommissioned officer in his unit — in 1995. Walking through a New York airport for a layover on my flight from Massachusetts to Nashville, the late day light through the windows reminded me of being a boy and running through the grass to meet Dad when he came home from maneuvers each summer. He was often sunburnt and tired, but he’d let loose that big tenor laugh and give me some small souvenir from wherever he’d been. Macadamia nuts and an idol carved from Hawaiian lava rock. Ash from Mt. St. Helens in a jar. Photos of the ocean crashing against Italian coastline, of narrow cobblestone streets in Germany, of haze wrapping the Eiffel Tower in Paris.

Daddy went just about everywhere in the Air Guard and as a civilian. In order of fluency, he spoke Spanish, German, Italian, and some French. And he never stopped exploring languages — in his big upstairs office at the house in Smyrna I had to stop three different CDs he’d left on pause in various players. One was a woman singing German songs, another was a lecture on Roman history, and the third was conversational Spanish phrases. That gives you some idea of how my father’s mind worked.

When I was a kid, Dad would make his time in the Air National Guard sound boring. Once he turned 80 he began telling stories and I learned it was anything but. From secret missions to Central America to riding horses in the Southwest desert to drinking wine in the Azores, Dad found joy in exploring, in learning, in observing. My father had a wild, adventurous side and it didn’t go away after he left the military. He and Mom moved to beautiful Lake Chapala in Mexico for a while, and I think that was as happy as he’d been in years. They moved back to the states after my brother passed, but Dad remained restless till the end — because a mind like Bob Huff’s was never content with sitting still, and that was one of the many things I loved about him. We were very alike that way.

Sorting through memories to share with you has been an impossible task. Some are too much about me, not enough about Dad. Others are too complicated to communicate with ease. I did think of one that seemed right because it revealed a side to my father he didn’t let many people see.

Dad and I went on a fishing trip with his friend James and James’s son Kelly when I was 15. I was put out, thinking I was too old — Kelly was younger than me, still a little kid — and also, hey, I was a teenager, you know how they can be. But Dad and James immediately surprised me by going to a store near the lake and buying nothing but junk food. We stayed in a cabin, and seeing how relaxed my father was with his friend, how at ease, making silly jokes, poking fun at James and James giving good as he got — it all made me realize for the first time that once he’d been a kid like me. Dad and his friend only got annoyed with us, their sons, one time — when we both caught fish and they didn’t catch a thing.

The best moment of the trip, though, was when we took the boat out at night to see if we could get any bites. It was a full moon and with his sharp eyes Dad navigated easily. We anchored in a cove surrounded by high, tree-lined cliffs, and dropped our lines in the water. After a while, I noticed that Dad had fallen silent. Then I did too, as did James and Kelly. And we sat there quietly in the cool summer night, just watching fireflies flicker in the trees above and listening to the water hush itself against the limestone walls around us. At some point, I realized that my loud, loquacious father was simply letting himself enjoy the silence. It was like that perfectly still moment that sometimes falls after a congregation has prayed aloud in church. In that instance I knew I’d never fully understood the depths of my father’s personality, just what a truly complex, brilliant, wonderful man he was.

Dad’s command of words was formidable, but he knew that living, like music, is made of silence as well as sound. He knew that sometimes you just let go of words and listened to the world breathe around you.

At this point I already feel like Dad would say I’ve gone on too long. After all, after my fourth child Dylan was born in 2003, Dad greeted me on the phone with a hearty, “Congratulations! You can stop now.”

Mom and Dad lost two of their four children. My brother David died in 2000, and my eldest sister Sherry died in 2016. I was worried both deaths would break them, but I should’ve given my parents more credit. And Dad surprised me again after Sherry passed. It was storming when she died. Just after the storm moved on, Dad said he stepped outside and for the first time in his life, saw the actual end, the termination point of a rainbow. In telling the story I always heard a little wonder in his voice.

A few days later, my family’s dear friends Silvia and Nacho brought Dad a cedar sapling. They showed him where they’d found it, and it was the exact place where he’d seen the rainbow end. So they planted the tree in one corner of the back yard as a memorial to my sister. Even though in life my father could very much seem like a practical, no-nonsense military man, he held strong spiritual beliefs and never stopped studying mythology, history, philosophy, and scriptures from various religions. Even after Bob Huff had trouble walking without assistance, he was ready for an adventure, if only in his kaleidoscopic mind.

I’ve read that seeing deer after the death of a loved one could be a sign “that our loved ones remain connected to us in spirit, even though they are no longer physically present.”

My father died at 2 am on the 21st. I stayed with him for a while, told him I loved him, that I would take care of my sister. Then I drove back to his house in Smyrna.

As I passed Stonecrest TriStar Medical Center, where my sister died and where Dad first went when he got sick the final time, I saw motion out of the corner of my eye. I glanced to the right and saw a young stag running through the grass beside the road. Mindful of the danger of hitting a deer — to the deer and to me — I slowed to about 10 mph. Sure enough, it bounded into the road, flashing through my headlights for a moment, then it leaped into the field on the other side. It was 3 in the morning, and I simply stopped the car on the empty road and watched it race away into the dark.

For a moment I felt real wonder cut through the lead-like grief sitting heavy on my heart.

The truth is that it was the coolest part of the day and the young male was taking advantage of it to seek out food and water. Yet I couldn’t help but feel it was also a message.

My father is gone, but his wild, wandering spirit will always be out there somewhere, looking for another adventure. Looking for more wonderful, colorful stories to tell.

Sherry’s Voice: Eulogy For My Sister

My sister and I, 1971

My elder sister Sherry Huff passed away on June 3, 2016. She was 58 years old. She’d begun to feel sick on May 17. It seemed like the flu at first but eventually it spiraled into septic shock.

Below is the eulogy I gave at her memorial on June 7, 2016, at Williamson Memorial Funeral Home in Franklin, Tennessee.

Sherry’s Voice

Let’s acknowledge it: for a force of nature like Sherry, it is very hard to accept the reality that she’s no longer with us. I don’t want to be in that reality. None of us do. Yet here we are. 

Words are my job now, I write every day, sometimes thousands of words. But I’ll tell you, it’s hard to find the words for this. So I’ll try to speak to the Sherry I knew, and hope that in the mess of what I say you find something familiar. 

Our grandpa Ben Huff had a phrase for men whom he admired or respected: “much of a man.” A man in full. Grandpa reserved the phrase for very few and he always said it with reverence.

My sister Sherry was much of a woman. I know she went through some very hard times. I saw her in the middle of some of those. A couple we went through together. But to me–and perhaps this was a youngest brother’s perspective set in stone from the cradle on–she was always much of a woman. Even when I knew she had hit rough patches and was struggling, I never doubted for a moment she’d make it through. This was my sister Sherry Huff, after all. Sweet, sensitive, creative, yes, but some steel in her spine, too. Being here today is a shock because I can’t believe she didn’t make it back.

When our brother David died in August, 2000, Sherry showed me how to try and get through a time like this. She was hurting just as bad as everyone else, perhaps even more, for they were ‘Irish twins’–siblings so close in age they could be mistaken for having been born at the same time. I saw her tears, yes. She didn’t try to hide them. Yet she set her jaw and carried us through it–carried me through, alongside her. Thinking back now, I believe I instinctively trusted that she would.

She’d always done that. When I could barely walk, she would take my hand and lead me through the woods. She’d lead me through the neighbors’ field where she, David, and Rhonda had already played years before I arrived. She’d sit me down in clover and weave crowns from it and put them on my unwilling head and take pictures of me then, sitting beside our old dog Bub. Sherry with a camera, even then. I can remember kind of dreading her and Rhonda pulling me away from whatever I thought I was doing to go outside, yet hoping they would.

I remember pestering her as we got older, wishing she still wanted to do those things more, but life went on. And that was okay, because Sherry was still always there.
After all, she’d been there when I was 7, leaning over me in the night as food poisoning tore me up inside, her face tight with worry. Sherry was there when I was 17. She bought me my first glass of wine and got me to tell her about the girls I loved. She was there when I was 33, leaning over me in her living room as I napped in a chair, as we prepared for David’s funeral. She was just there, beautiful and urgent in the way she loved her family. She was vibrant. To a little boy, she was magical. I believe I wasn’t the only one who ever felt that way in her presence.

But after we grow up we can forget that siblings are like the pieces in one of the crazy quilts my Granny Huff used to make: tightly threaded jagged parts that together form something warm and comforting.

Sherry would remind me, though, and she had a hilarious way of doing it. She’d text me crazy clown pictures. It started with Bozo the Clown, then Pennywise, then whatever else she could find to mess with me. Sherry and I shared a lot of traits. We were a lot alike, and she knew that better than I did. We made the same kinds of dark jokes and liked the same kinds of movies. We understood our family in a similar way. With family, she was my touchstone. If I didn’t understand someone’s actions, behavior, even wondered why they posted something on Facebook, I would text Sherry and we’d go back and forth, laughing at the craziness, in the end. Sherry always understood.

It’s easy at a time like this to be too sad for words. It’s easy to be angry, in 100 different ways. She was too young. She was too vital. She was too Sherry. But if Sherry and I shared another thing that’s become very important to me over time, we shared humor.

Sherry had a Twitter account and she knew I enjoyed that site. We even ended up sharing friends on Twitter, people from all over who had jobs like mine and found my sarcastic sister funny too.

I’ll admit, it’s probably going to be hard to look at her Twitter for a long time. She posted a lot of things that to me were the best about her. Photos of old barns and sunsets and of course of Odie. I’ll never see any of those without thinking of her. She would tweet at me, too. One of the last things she ever directed at me was a tweet she posted in January with an image of a shower head and the words, “Our ultimate goal is to make as many people as sad as possible when we die.” She added her own comment: “This is a true story.”

It was dark and very funny.

I want this to be organized and have a point and be good writing–or speaking, I guess–but you know, it’s a mess because this is hard. However, I can’t help but think Sherry would want me to close with something that’s almost as funny as it is sad. She’d want someone to smile and shake their heads.

After she’d gone into the ICU and it was clear even to me up Massachusetts that the situation was very bad, I realized I was a mess and needed to clean up. And maybe I needed to be alone, away from my wife and kids for a minute.

I got in the shower and within a few minutes I was crying. I hated being so far away, I wished I could be near her one more time. In the middle of this tornado of thoughts, a loud, forceful voice barreled through everything: “CRYING IN THE SHOWER, BABY BRO? REALLY? THAT’S SO CORNY!! COME ON!!” Followed by that big old laugh. Sherry, the Sherry I knew and loved beyond words, piping up in my head and smacking me out of it. I don’t mean it was actually her–it was a voice from how I knew her, and how I suspect many others did as well. And I tell you, I went from tears to laughing in a heartbeat. And I knew that Sherry would be glad I could do both.

Let’s remember the best of my beautiful, fiercely loving sister. Let’s remember how sweet and kind she was. Remember her magical eye for sunsets, for old barns, for the sky. And I have to believe she’d want every one of us to remember laughing with her. As with any other force of nature, like storms, you got it all with Sherry. That’s why it’s so hard to believe I’m having to say these things today.

She’s really not gone as long as any of us have a memory. Like me, you’re going to have moments, is my bet, when Sherry will pipe up inside your head, breaking you up, making you laugh, smacking you into your senses. Hold onto them as long as you can.

Sherry is a huge part of me. She helped make me who I am, in many ways. My second mama, a piece of my heart. Her voice is inside me, forever. It’s not enough, I want her here. But I will hold onto it for as long as I live.