Yo Recuerdo Mi Papí – I Remember My Papi

my papiToday is an anniversary. Last June 22 was a Father’s Day I will never forget.

Though I had been writing a few months already, it was a secret known only to the three members of my household and my Papí. During the last year of his life, my grandfather lay in bed quietly eating candy by the handful and impatiently waiting to join his Honey, recently passed after seventy-four years by his side.

Every Saturday during those last two years I would drive to his house to spend some time with him, never knowing for certain if that drive would be the last. Papí was the first person I told I was writing both because I didn’t want to miss the chance to tell him and because my grandfather delighted in keeping a secret.

During his final two months, I would bring my binder of children’s stories to read out loud, turning pages with one hand while holding his in the other. Every week as I entered the room, his wrinkles would part and his eyes would brighten. He would proudly announce that he hadn’t told a soul and then ask if I had found a publisher.

Of course I had not. I was writing simple children’s rhymes and was a wide world away from publishing. Yet on the day before Father’s Day last year, I told him that yes, I had found a publisher and my work would likely see print by the end of the year.

The next day, I met with my dad for breakfast where I handed him a binder with all my stories and shared the rough draft of the novel I’d written. It was my official coming out – a new door was open. Saying the words out loud to someone besides my Papí had rendered them to reality.

I was a writer.

Just as morning fell into afternoon, I got a call from my mother. The doctors were saying Papí probably wouldn’t make it through the night. Less than an hour passed before the phone rang again, and I knew before I answered that at 99 years old, the most remarkable life I had ever known would never draw another breath.

The next week was his funeral. Below you will find a handful of the words I recited, written in the same rhythm as so many of the stories I read to him during his few final weeks. Papí wasn’t sad to go. Every week he told me he was ready and often wondered why it was taking so long. I did not grieve for the passing of a life well lived, but I still miss my Papí every day.

Jose Ramos, Daddy, Papí. A man impossible to copy.
He had a one and only inclination to live his life with such elation,
joy and mischief, mirth, and cheer; too much for one century, minus a year.

Papí was gentle, and impossibly funny. He valued his friendships far above money.
He always looked forward and without regret. He never walked away from a window to bet.
He meant so much to me in his immovable place. I can look in the mirror and stare at his face.

Ever since that time when I was small – a sassy little know it all -
he and my Honey guided me, to the best that I could be.
Every weekend of my youth, with conduct ungrateful and a little uncouth,
they took me in and taught me well. But more than simply to speak and to spell.
They taught me other messages, a lot more essential, like meeting and making my moral potential.

They trained me not to cheat or lie, to never quit and always try,
to speak my mind and wait my turn, to show compassion and concern,
to all my neighbors, lend out a hand or maybe an ear to understand.

The best from all these lessons learned, a powerful example burned
(in my mind like it was branded), they both taught me single handed
how to treat my only other – as though the world could hold no other
soul who could ever compare, no matter who and no matter where.

They loved each other without doubt, without dearth, and without drought.
Even though I was only a kid, I know exactly the good that it did.
It showed me what to want from life, then led me toward my perfect wife.

If I could ever travel back, take the years and flip the stack,
I’d look them in their younger eyes and thank them true for being wise
and providing me a perfect picture to follow like a written scripture.

I grew up, and added years, a bigger nose and longer ears.
By the time I was mature, walking tall and talking sure.
I saw Papí from a different position, with what I’d already seen plus another addition.

It’s not the years in our life but the life in our years, the gray in our hair and the salt in our tears.
The smiles we carry and people we meet, the flavors of life from sour to sweet.
Papi’s a man who met wisdom with age, by living his life like he lived it on stage.
I’ll never forget him if I’m a hundred and five. In my heart I will always keep Papi alive.

Writer Dad

The Sands of Time

The Sands of Time

The sands of TIME are always dropping.
Never slowing, never stopping.
TIME moves on, his beat unchanging.
Minutes for moments, always exchanging.

Father Time keeps everything steady.
He only cares about us, not if we’re ready.
TIME is his asset – the greatest we get.
We must discover this early and never forget.

June never knew this, at least that’s how she acted.
The character of days she routinely subtracted.
Whittling hours to minutes, then seconds to nil,
Life rolled from her grip like a boulder down hill.

June never quite got it – that TIME is a treasure,
And should only be used in appreciative measure.
June thought of her TIME as unending as water,
She lined up her minutes then led them to slaughter.

Father Time (as you know) is ancient and fair.
He is always alert and always aware.
He wants us to treasure his glorious gift,
By not living too slow, or silent or swift.

His advice is so simple. Sincerely, it’s smart:
Treat each day as your last, live it full with your heart.
But June didn’t do this. She was not even near.
June misspent her calendar, year after year.

She found herself sprinting and falling behind,
With too many things always clouding her mind.
The day of out tale June was running around.
If being early was sky, then June was the ground.

Though feeling behind and a bit overdue,
June was not feeling anything new.
June’s trademark trait, her own custom quirk,
was never quite getting her daylight to work.

So Time came out of nowhere as he’s known to do,
When his minutes get frittered to only a few.
He appeared on her lawn in an angry dark cloud.
He was walking real tall and talking real loud.

His beard was snow white, and ancient and long.
His arms looked like sticks, though quite obviously strong.
Each limb was unique; they did not share the same size,
Complimenting the chronographs ablaze in his eyes.

They were ticking round clocks with a big and small hand.
On his chest was an hour glass spilling its sand.
June’s house became flooded in a fine mist of smoke.
Time entered the room and like thunder he spoke.

“Stop where you are!” came his bellowed command.
“You’ve been mocking my first and my long second hand!
You’re treating my TIME as though merely a joke,”
The room then belched a bit with a ringlet of smoke.

“You let every one of your minutes bleed,
As if I served no other need,
Then helping your days fall off the calendar fast,
Ahead toward your future, away from your past!”

Father Time sighed and then dropped on the couch.
“I am not easily offended, or a grumpy old grouch,
But TIME is so soft. It is easy to bruise.
You must always be wary of how much you lose.

When it is gone, it will never return.
TIME sees no difference in what you earn,
Or how much money you keep in the bank.
June,” Father Time paused. “I have to be frank.”

“Every minute you use is one less than before,
And I am never permitted to offer you more.
It doesn’t matter one bit how much you might try
Or whine, or beg, or scream, or cry.

I hand it out once and then never again.
All TIME is a mixture of how and when.
How you spend it, and when you are through.
A minute’s a minute. You can’t split it in two.

You must understand that before it’s too late.
We all live the life we decide to create.”
“So, do the important, ignore the small.
There is not enough time to get to it all.

Make time for a sunrise, take a walk in the park.
Aim to go slower and bulls-eye your mark.
Television’s terrific, but books are great too.
Try singing or painting, or anything new.”

June looked at time. She stared that clock in his face,
Then said, “You’re right! I’ve been living all over the place.
I have to slow down. I understand that I do.
I can’t keep bounding about like a big kangaroo.

I’ll start to notice the small things in my days,
By doing new things and changing my ways.”
Then June got excited. Her voice jumped in pitch.
Something had shifted, inside her a switch.

“I will start to consider the things that I do.
It’s out with the old and in with the new.
I’ll go to bed early and wake up the same.
I’ll paint my picture of life in a whole different frame.

Instead of watching my seconds all circle the drain,
I’ll treat them like shelter in a torrent of rain.”
June was now jumping and pacing the ground,
Enlivened by something first lost and then found.

“I’ll play the piano and get exercise.”
Father Time had to smile at the gleam in her eyes.
“I’ll learn a new language, turn off my TV.
I’m a whole different person, Father, wait and you’ll see.”

“I don’t need to see,” he said, “I’m watching right now.”
Father Time kindly knelt, wiping sweat from her brow.
“This is a lesson that you understand.
Appreciate TIME and your life will expand.

You only get one chance. Make your life the best.
Don’t spend it all running and feeling so stressed.”
“Will I see you again?” June said as TIME started to fade.
“Not if you follow the pact that we made.

Live a life that’s momentous. You hold ME in your hand.
Treasure each moment like the last grain of sand.”

Writer Dad

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Black and White

Today is Cindy’s birthday. She is the most extraordinary woman I know and I am fortunate beyond words that she walked into my life when she did. She has given me life beyond expectation and children of unparalleled wonder. Hers is a remarkable story, one I hope she shares one day.

Here’s a single thread, nicely sewn.
Enjoy!

cool-clock-butterfly-roundThe thing about Cindy… she’s so black and white.
She knows what is wrong and she knows what is right.

All the gray matters that bounce in her brain
are pregnant to pour like a storm cloud of rain.

She’s witnessed a world from land mass to sea
for around 30 years before she met me.

Some of those years were spent solemn and sad,
though no sadder than you if you lived the life that she had.

Cindy was born to a mommy who loved her,
then faded from life with the birth of her brother.

This was at 3, that era of days
when eyes wide with wonder soak in the world’s ways.

Unfortunately her father just couldn’t quite cope,
with a a life that was fraying like a soaking wet rope

So she and her brother were gathered then dropped,
with the care of a floor that’s about to get mopped.

Both were abandoned at grandparents’ farm;
one filled with good and the other with harm.

Grandma was kind and caring and clean.
Grandpa was dirty and violent and mean.

Cindy was saddled with a long list of chores;
she milked all the cows and cleaned all the floors.

The hero of our tale was not yet quite four
when required to wander from childhood’s front door.

Unspeakable awful transpired in that place,
branding her memories that time can’t erase.

That’s where she stayed until she was five,
then retrieved by her father just kind of alive.

I’d love to report things improved from that day,
but life grew so dim she looked forward to gray.

A venomous father and step monster who stung,
filled her with secrets then cut out her tongue.

Now who would you be if that was your start?
If life battered and beat down and bruised up your heart?

If that were me, I have to confess,
I’d be an immeasurable immovable mess.

But Cindy has soul that is sterling like silver
and only gets stronger when stuff doesn’t kill her.

She turned 18 and left. She never glanced back,
looking forward instead for a life to attack.

She finished with school and started to teach,
in search of raw minds that were ready to reach.

She crossed a few continents from Asia to Europe,
her years to experience like pancakes to syrup.

Her effort was noted, her horn it was tooted;
rewarded, awarded, then she was recruited.

They brought her to Cali – that’s where she met me,
a big burning sun and a brilliant blue sea.

We felt an inferno from our very first spark -
the light of my laughter full flooding her dark.

She had the wisdom to water my seed;
the honest integrity I knew I would need.

It’s been one dozen years since we knitted our lives
and 2/3 at 8 since I made her my wife.

There is no doubt that we both have grown,
but here are some things that I’ve always known:

Cindy is soulful, her eyes would agree.
I still get the shivers when she throws them at me.

Her heels always dig in so deep for a fight
whenever she sees what she knows isn’t right.

Her belief in small children and all they can do
is unfortunately shared by a relative few.

Cindy’s unfailing faith in the poise of my pen
is a little bit humbling and little bit zen.

Two years ago I wrote nothing at all,
but during one winter, one spring and one fall

She said I should scribble. She pleaded, “JUST WRITE!”
She told me in daylight and again late at night.

She believed what I didn’t, but I did as she said.
I wrote and I wrote ‘til my fingers were red.

Now I pen paragraphs of poetry and prose.
My language in bloom like the blush of a rose.

My words (like my Cindy) are all black and white,
but between all the spaces the colors are bright.

Life is now lovely and laden with laughter.
The two of us living in our ever after.

Writer Dad

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An Ode to My Daughter

My daughter was born with winter in swing,
all done with fall and midway to spring.

Two chocolate drop eyes and a cherubic nose
just above blushing cheeks that were lit like a rose.

She rewrote our life with an edit of wonder,
took all our targets and tore them asunder.

No matter how much you know, or how much you care,
no mother or father can ever prepare

For the razor thin line that’s drawn after birth
between sacrifices needed and what they are worth.

For two and a half years, she shared with no other,
just Mommy and Daddy; no sign of a brother.

We soaked 29 months like light from the sun,
with learning and laughter and fistfuls of fun.

Then her brother was born and to our surprise,
the two of them met when she stared in his eyes.

“I love you, Max Michael,” our little girl said.
She first kissed his cheek and then patted his head.

The four of us frolicked through several new stages,
chewing our challenges and varying changes.

We opened our school and told her we’d need her
to set an example and be a good leader.

She stepped right up and shined like a star,
beaming a broadcast about how lucky we are.

Like lightning our years quickly fell from the sky.
First preschool then kinder, both flew right on by.

Now she’s in 1st grade, our sweet little lass -
caring, creative, and top of her class.

I love her smile, her humor and mind.
I love that she’s tender. I love that she’s kind.

My little Mia, like an apple and tree,
is a little bit Mommy and a little bit me.

Questions are the New Answers

Today marks the return of Lucas. This is his fourth visit, third credited. Please enjoy.

questions not answersHi again, it’s Lucas. I’m just sitting here in class,
considering a conclusion that I didn’t want to pass.

I was diddling some doodles, on my paper with my pen
when I had a little insight that was altogether zen.

The thought was kind of large, at least larger than me,
but it shined a bit of light on the way that things should be.

You may think it silly, but I have some concern
about the way we get our answers and the way that we all learn.

The way our teachers teach us, well it’s based on an old system.
Now that times are changing, I think we should be changing with them.

The methods they use now reward all those who memorize the most.
Learn by rote, take the test and then they’re fit to boast.

But facts and figures fall to fruitless when you’re looking at your feet,
and find that they’re now bopping to a wholly different beat.

It blew in like a cyclone, this redefining shift.
We didn’t catch it quickly. Now we’ve found ourselves adrift.

You see, a system built on answers simply can not grow.
We need creative queries to bring us brand new things to know.

With the Internet inside our palm, answers lose their worth.
The techniques we use to learn deserve to have a brand new birth.

Questions have more value because they teach us how to think;
our thoughts and are behavior share an undisputed link.

Should we absorb the moment of that first shot in a war
or could there be some bigger issues that we could explore?

If we believe that answers shouldn’t come first anymore,
then we’ll develop questions that have not been thought before.

Let’s ponder this example: let’s bow our heads and think.
Take your time, take a breath. Okay, now go ahead and blink.

Let’s flip back in time a while to when Human Beings were new.
Before we had societies, in the dawn of our debut.

We were not committing answers then, with just one thing to solve.
The question we were asking was, “now, how can we evolve?”

First we worked with fire. Then we worked the land.
We had so many questions, and so much to understand.

We created language, art, religion and set Governments in place,
as the entire population spread across our planet’s face.

Now we have computers and answers oozing cheap.
It’s time for the entire race to take another giant leap.

Let’s ask ourselves about our future and discover what is next.
If we start out asking simply, we can soon grow more complex.

The next time that your teacher asks the answer to a question,
raise your hand and say “Excuse me, but I’ve got a suggestion.”

Say, “Answers were for yesterday. I’m looking toward our fate;
a future filled with such potential, I can hardly wait.

Perhaps tomorrow we’ll have a world where there isn’t any war;
no disease, hungry people, or violence any more.

If we start knowing what to ask, our future has no ceiling.
I know that I am just a kid, but listen to my feeling.”

You can be just like my teacher when I told her the word.
She said, “Lucas Bright, that is the smartest thing I’ve ever heard!”

Sean Platt is a dad, ghostwriter, and occassional potty training expert.

An Ode to My Boy

Max he was born,
one summer morn,
the weekend of Father’s Day.

A gift given forever
to constantly treasure
in every conceivable way.

Welcomed by 3,
Mia just to my knee,
she met him with “I Love You.”

That’s pretty neat
and impossibly sweet.
I swear it’s emphatically true.

Our beautiful son,
happy ham from day one,
was congested in genuine joy.

I say minus conceit,
we were right then complete,
there with our girl and our boy.

Well, he was a riot,
compared to the quiet
of his sister’s sweet sounding coos.

He demanded his place
with tears on his face,
to settle he’d simply refuse.

Months marched along,
the year sang her song,
that final verse twisted our tune.

Our boy was so splendid,
but we were extended;
our minutes all scattered and strewn.

Before we would falter
we needed to alter;
new lives to fit our new need.

So we scheduled a forum
with happy decorum,
then wrote down a plan and agreed.

We did something cool
and opened a school
for wee-ones with wonderful wit.

The first years fly by
in the blink of an eye -
a fact we couldn’t forget.

By then Max was one,
over two feet of fun,
both mired in mischief and mirth.

If we are appraising,
well life was amazing,
better each day since his birth.

Across the next couple of years,
surrounded by peers,
our puppy progressed to a dog.

We were right – it flew fast,
but we made each minute last,
unwilling to live in a fog.

A half decade later,
he’s the constant creator
of limitless minutes of joy.

Yes, we’re attached,
but he’s truly unmatched,
my clever, congenial boy.

September is soon;
an upcoming moon.
Our school day will see two in the car.

It’s a little bit fitting
to find me admitting
that I find that idea bizarre.

My days have been filled
by the bliss that we build,
and that I shall never forget.

But I know in my heart
that we’re still at the start
and the best has not happened yet.

Writer Dad

Happy Valentine’s Day

2339258030_d2b79eea51On a perfectly clear September day,
In a year two more than ten away,

What fortune began as a beautiful glance,
Compelled you next to take a chance,

By doing something unbelievably hard,
handing me your business card.

“I’m flattered,” I said, ”But have to be straight.
I would love to go out, though I really should wait.

Things aren’t quite finished in a situation that’s through
And I‘d like that door closed, before I start something new.”

“Life’s too short,” you said, “to spend any sad.
Call me for coffee. I’m sure you’ll be glad.”

Of course I responded though not right away.
I waited for six and then added a day,

Before sending you flowers, fragrant and white,
Beautifully bloomed and aimed to excite.

I sent no note with the flowers simply because
That wasn’t the kind of guy that I was.

But you wrote one to me, which I got in the mail.
You were doing what I’d done; you were leaving a trail.

Another two weeks until we spoke on the phone,
Each of us pacing our bedroom alone.

Thirty short hours we chatted that week,
Until getting the chance to finally speak -

Face to face on our very first date
(Dinner and a flick capped a lingering wait).

You were so nervous, you shook like a leaf;
Drifting through evening in raw disbelief.

That night was perfect, a dream coming true.
You understood me and I understood you.

It was right then we knew, that our time should be spent,
Happy together in the highest percent.

The next year flew by in nearly a blur,
Deep in exploration of who each of us were.

Going to movies and talking all night -
Impossible to stop with conversation in flight.

By the falling of leaves we were living as one,
Still packing each night with impossible fun.

We read lots of books, played lots of games,
Ate lots of pasta and kept fanning our flames.

We lived just like that for another three years;
Feeling so certain, harboring no fears.

We bought a few hundred square feet and even payed cash,
By emptying out our reciprocal stash.

We fixed our place up and then we moved in,
Ready for the next phase of our lives to begin.

We weren’t home too long when delight and surprise -
In nine months we’d welcome a new set of eyes.

Summer came quickly. We altered your name,
Though everything else stayed exactly the same.

The next nine months glowed with a beautiful mood,
Considerable questions and plenty of food.

Then a couple of weeks into the new year,
Our brand new baby was finally here.

“It’s a beautiful ballerina!” the doctor had said.
She wore your giant eyes in her petite little head.

She was perfect we knew from that very first day.
Nothing could take our happy away.

We brought our babe home into a world that was new.
She had so much to learn, both of us too.

Every lesson we taught her, she sent one in return.
Sometimes we were soft, sometimes we were stern.

We kept our minds open and let ourselves grow.
We held no horizons in our desire to know.

We discovered so much and were ready for more;
Both eager to make a new face to adore.

He arrived like a miracle, on Father’s Day morn -
That day when our sensational Son Shine was born.

He looked just like his daddy – our beautiful son.
We were finally four and our family was done.

Instantly bold, he demanded his place,
Insistent he share in an equal embrace.

That next year was hard, the hardest we’d had,
Though not for a second was it ever bad.

With so much to juggle and not enough minutes per day,
All of our minutes felt faded away.

We needed a reset or new way of thinking.
Life is no fun when it feels like you’re sinking.

I took hold of your hand, you took hold of mine.
If we jumped together, we’d both be fine.

We ran around three years, then aimed for the sky.
We’ll never get going if we never try.

We rebooted our reset and shattered our ceiling.
Intuition and instinct, fueled by gut feeling.

We took a big risk. We hope it will pay,
But we cannot expect our tomorrow today.

Our family is tight, like the threads of a rope,
And our future is filled with meticulous hope.

Life has never felt fuller or shined quite so bright,
As we wait for the spark of our next phase to ignite.

I’ve never loved you more than this moment today.
You are my angel, Happy Valentine’s Day!

Writer Dad

Sure Mom, You Can Have a Guest Post.

“When you teach your son, you teach your son’s son.”

~The Talmud

My grandfather happened to pass, the day I told my family I’d started writing.  Every Saturday for the last few months of his life, I sat next to him in bed and read him my rhymes.  At his funeral, I read a rhyme I wrote for him.

The following Wednesday, my mom came to dinner with a page of prose to match the piece she’d heard.  Her tip of the bonnet to me.

When I told her I was planning a post on the power of praise, she asked if she could publish the poem she’d penned.

“Um… sure,” I said, preceding a twitter of nervous laughter.

One day, I’m certain, my mom will join us in Blogopolis.  This will be good for her, and save me from random phone calls explaining the events of Xena, Warrior Princess, Angel, and Nip Tuck. Actually, now that I think about it, twitter would be right up my mom’s alley.

Without further ado, here’s Grammy:

When Sean was just a little guy,
he was the apple of my eye.
My first, my baby, my pride, my joy.
But oh my God, was he all boy!
He certainly put me through my paces,
with mischievous acts and silly faces.
Then along came a sister, we saw as a thrill;
he was a rascally Jack to her sweet little Jill.
A brand new playmate, the perfect target,
for pranks that would daily challenge Margaret.
When teachers called me to complain
about behavior quite insane,
I took it all with a granule of salt,
never wanting to launch parental assault.
Life is not black and life is not white.
It’s many shades of grey in my sight.
Kids will be bad, and kids will be good,
but kids should also be understood.
Sean was fun, a total charmer,
but true in heart, a never harmer.
I knew that in spite of his wit and his spunk,
immature actions and juvenile junk,
I saw the spirit of someone great
who could be a father and perfect mate.
Take some maturity, add on the years,
all life’s experience and some of its tears.
Sprinkle some patience, then you will see,
the outstanding man he was destined to be.
As I have grown in age and in girth,
I have never regretted once giving birth
to a rascally, bright, and challenging child.
Sometimes tender, occasionally wild.
He’s grown to be more than I could expect;
honest, straightforward, mature, and direct.
Still ten years old when we are alone,
but wise beyond years when needed at home.
His grandma and grandpa look down in pride
at the man he’s become, past history aside.
He certainly gave them a run for their money,
but now walks the path of his Papí and Honey.

Writer Dad

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In an upcoming post Writer Dad’s gonna rap about the grueling difficulties of a good edit.. and how they’re exponentially worse when doing them with your mother.