Father's Day is a day of commemoration and celebration of Dad. A time for letting your Dad know how much you love him. Strengthen the ties that bind and make his day extra special with a message straight from your heart. It is a day to not only honor your father, but all men who have acted as a father figure in your life - whether as Stepfathers, Uncles, Grandfathers, or "Big Brothers."
President Calvin Coolidge proclaimed the third Sunday in June as Father's Day. Roses are the Father's Day flowers: red to be worn for a living father and white if the father has died.
Thanks for
raising me, Dad !
Father's Day Festival has gained amazing popularity over the years. The festival is considered to be a secular one and is celebrated not just in US but in a large number of countries around the world including Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, France, Germany, Japan, New Zealand, Norway and India though on different dates. World over people take Father's Day as an opportunity to thank father and pay tribute to them. On this day children present Father's Day cards not just to their dads but also grandfathers, uncles, stepfathers or any other person who commands the position of a father in their life. There is also a trend to present Father's Day gift to dad, most popular of all being necktie. Other popular gift being roses, the official Father's Day flower. Many people rue that the trend of presenting gifts to fathers has led to over commercialization of the festival relegating the noble idea behind Father's Day celebration.

When
I was ...
*
4
years old ~ My daddy can do anything.
* 5 years old ~
My daddy knows a whole lot.
*
6 years old ~ My dad is smarter than your dad.
*
8 years old ~ My dad doesn't know exactly everything.
*
10 years old ~ In the olden days, when my dad grew up, things were sure different.
*
12 years old ~ Oh, well, naturally, Dad doesn't know anything about that. He
is too old to remember his childhood.
*
14 years old ~ Don't pay any attention to my dad. He is so old-fashioned.
*
21 years old ~ Him? My Lord, he's hopelessly out of date.
*
25 years old ~ Dad knows about it, but then he should,
because he has been around so long.
*
30 years old ~ May be we should ask Dad what he thinks. After all, he's had a
lot of experience.
*
35 years old ~ I'm not doing a single thing until I talk to Dad.
* 40 years
old ~ I wonder how Dad would have handled it. He was so wise.
*
50 years old ~ I'd give anything if Dad were here now so I could talk this over
with him. Too bad I didn't appreciate how smart he was. I could have learned
a lot from him.