"At the end of the day people won't remember what you said or did,
they will remember how you made them feel."
  Maya Angelou
 
The Check      
I don't know when this started, but I know it went on for a lifetime. My dad, Harry, and his brother, John, were close. They pulled pranks together, loved jazz music, joined the Naval Air Corp and even worked for the same company for a while after the war. Their sister Mary was very close friends, from junior high school on, with both of their wives, my mom and Aunt Dolores. All of them were a big part of the foundation of my family.

At some point a long time ago, my dad and Uncle John began a tradition. I don't know who started it, but it lasted until my uncle passed away in 1991.

Each year in March, Uncle John would send my dad a birthday card with a check for five dollars. And every August, my dad would send Uncle John a birthday card with a check for five dollars. Dad sent the check above on August 28, 1974, two days before Uncle John's birthday, so that it would make it from Tarzana to La Canada exactly on time.

I found it the other day, as I was sorting through some of my parents' papers. No big deal on the surface. They were just trading five dollars back and forth each year. But what they were really doing was sharing an inside joke and brotherly love that lasted a lifetime.
- Hank Frazee, Author of  Referral Upgrade   and  Before We Say "Goodnight"
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