Saying goodbye to Daddy every morning is one of those adorable kid-designed rituals that requires explicit care to execute just right. This is the basic plan:
1. Each child must be hugged and kissed before Daddy can leave.
2. Daddy walks out the door.
Aah, you say that sounds easy… but this is where things get complicated.
Should a delay happen between the hugs and Dad’s departure (a quick conversation, or a return to the house for forgotten keys), the hugs are void for the purpose of saying goodbye, and step 1 must be repeted.
All hugs must be given out equally. If a child is still in bed and they hear the door open, they will dive down the stairs to get their hug. Should Dad not hear them running, they will stand on the porch waving their arms to get his attention until he comes back in and hugs them … necessitting a return to step 1 because of the delay mentioned before. If a child is so deeply asleep tht they miss Dad’s departure, another one will appoint themselves hug-master and will give the sleepy child “half” of their own goodbye hug from Daddy when the child wakes up and inevitably cries because Daddy is already gone.
Weather can also play a role in our goodbye routine. On rainy or cold mornings, the kids are content to kiss Dad at the front door, but if it is sunny outside, they consider it a great thrill to wave at his car from the front porch. On particularly beautiful days they will run barefoot through the yard waving and shouting “Goodbye! Goodbye!” until his car is completely out of sight. The neighbors must think tht we have royalty visiting the house on those mornings.