
iTunes Selection:  "My Father's Gun"  -Elton John
As Elton  John’s song “My Fathers Gun” says, ‘...from this day on I wear my  father’s gun...’  I’m sure he had a different take on it, maybe he was  telling someone that he was taking up his father’s cause...  I don’t  know. I just thought the song spoke to me and this pistol.
This  is my father’s Gun, a Norinco 1911.  He purchased it back before some of  the more interesting gun laws that restricted the sale of foreign made  firearms.  I got the call one day from him asking if I wanted it. His  new wife had known some people that had lost a son from an negligent  discharge and she didn’t want any firearms around.  I offered to take  it.
When the pistol arrived it was just bone stock, similar to  what the 1911 looked like while it was in military service.  It had a  Blued finish, plastic grips, low sights, and small controls.  Those many  years ago I thought it would be a perfect pistol to customize.
Not  knowing very much about working on them I found a local guy that said  he might be able to add a few parts here and there, and hopefully get it  to work.  Not realizing what I was doing I gave him a few parts at a  time to add on.  Each time I enjoyed the slight changes and wondered  what else could be down.  After about 6 months I had a majority of the  work down and it was looking good.
Some time later my wife (at  the time) came back from a deployment and asked me what I had been  buying while she was gone.  I guess I should have explained it better,  but at that point I didn't tell her about the pistol.
A few days  later I came home from work to find my bag with my stuff in it empty and  the contents of my range bag spread out all over the back porch.  I'd  been robbed!  I started to panic.
Nothing.  The rest of the house  was in perfect shape, TV still in the living room, DVD’s still on the  shelf, and doors still in one piece.
Eventually my wife came home  and informed me that she had stolen it.  She had taken my stuff to the  police and turned everything in. I was frantic, I called the police  department, sheriff’s office, everyone I could think of.  No one could  tell me anything. Holding onto what little mind I had left I calmly  tried to speak with my wife and find out more.
Long story short  our conversation did not go well.  I ended up sleeping in the guest  bedroom after a prolonged fight that exploded into an all out war.  The  next day I again called the proper authorities and asked if  “my-soon-to-be-ex-wife” had turned anything in?
Half way through  the next day at work I finally got a call, not from a police station,  but from my brother in-law that lived with us.
“ah, dude, did you  loose your stuff?”
I was like, “ah, yeah, you might have heard  us yelling last night.”
“ah, dude, i think i found something...   looks like a gun, its ah, all buried in the garden...” He said in  between drags off his cigarette.
Speeding home I half prayed that  what he had found was my stuff and half prayed it was something else.
When  i got home I ran to the back yard. There buried in the flower garden  was my father’s gun.   There was the 1911, red with rust and coated with  mud like it had just been pulled out of a French trench from World War  I.  Tossing it into the back of my jeep I was so full of anger that when  my wife drove up smiling and trying to apologize I heard nothing of  what she said and I turned and yelled at her “THIS IS ME FATHER’S  GUN!!!”
I jumped back into my jeep and went back to work.  A  co-worker helped me out and took it home and dropped it off at a local  gun store that promised to see what they could do to clean it up.  A few  days later I picked up the pistol, no longer red with rust, it was just  pitted with spots from where the rust had gotten into the metal. It  looked old, and not in a good way.  A couple of days later my wife asked  me, “what’s with this charge from the gun store?”
I calmly told  her it was her cleaning bill.
I never brought out anything  firearm related again, never discussed them around her, and always kept  everything locked up and hidden from her. I no longer trusted her.
About  a year later my father and brother came out to visit me and I took them  to the range. My father was sickly looking, already starting to look  and feel bad from what would later take his life. He commented on how  old the gun looked. I couldn’t bear to tell him what had happened to it.
Less  than a year later my father died.   I hadn’t taken out the pistol since  I'd seen him. Several weeks later I received some money from his estate  and I promised myself I'd fix his pistol.  I called Novaks Sights and  asked for a quote.  Sights, reliability job, and a new paint job. I  mailed them the pistol and wrote them a quick note.
Enclosed is  my father’s gun. He recently died and I want to fix it up.
Two  weeks later I got a note on my door from UPS, I needed to sign for a  package from Novak.  I drove there after work, signed for it and went  out to my truck. I couldn’t wait, I had to see it.
I opened the  box and carefully opened the plastic case. Inside was a note that  thanked me for my business, and one brand new looking 1911.
I  actually was afraid to touch it, i didn’t want to smudge it. I didn’t  want to harm it, I didn’t want to do anything to it. And then it  happened, I started to cry.  The gun brought back all the memories of my  dad taking my brother and I to the range as kids. Showing us how to  shoot, spending time with him and my brother.
I originally didn’t  want to do anything to the gun, maybe frame it and hang it on the wall.   But I finally decided I needed to shoot it. I cut out some skate board  tape for the front grip, found some wood grips from a Colt and asked a  different local gunsmith to smooth out the trigger for me.
I  can’t say it’s the best pistol I own, but I can say its the most  valuable pistol I'll ever have.