New Year’s Re-Solutions

“Good resolutions are simply checks that men draw on a bank where they have no account.”

~ Oscar Wilde

resolutionsI understand the flawed logic of New Year’s resolutions.  If an intention is worth commitment, why should it require a special spot on the calendar?  A valid question, sure.

It doesn’t, but we as humans are always in search of beginnings; few dawns are as clear as that one that doctors our final digit.

The problem with New Year’s resolutions isn’t that they’re made. It’s that they are rarely ever kept. I myself love my resolutions. I make them each year and do my best to keep them. I write them down, commit them to memory, and make them a part of my everyday thought.

No one gets anywhere by saying they want to do something. They arrive only after a series of steps, each moving them closer toward their goal.

I won’t bore you with the minutia of my method, nor will I write the entire rundown of all I’ll endeavor to do this year, but I do adore the public accountability of my internet living room. So here, in no particular order, are seven things I will do by the final seconds of this new year.

1)  I will write a song.  I use to love writing songs in my late teens (basic chord progressions + awkward lyrics = post adolescent awesome). I’ve never actually written a good one, and I’m not saying I’ll write a good one now, but I will write one to completion and share it with you here (yes, terrible singing voice and all).

2)  I will be bilingual. This was on my list last year and I hate to admit I didn’t make it. I don’t expect to deliver any monologues en español, but I should be able to hold my own with an average third grader. I owe it to my children as well as myself.

3) I will make my living online. Yep.

4)  I will see a small fraction of my words in print. Last year’s list said, “I will get published.” I do that M-F now, thanks to WordPress. This year, I’d like someone else to bless my verbiage.

5)  I will organize my digital life. Oh, I love dealing in all the digitalia, but I let it dangle way too much. I have heaps of unorganized photos and files, the pile getting harder to sift.

6) I will read old fashioned books like I have for twenty-nine of the last thirty years. I hardly feel like a need to apologize to the written word; I’ve never loved it more. However, I have traded turning pages for browsers. I will never be half the writer I wish to be until I return to the reader I once was.

7)  I will listen to more music. Music has gone from a large part of my life to a part of my life that is largely gone. No more. I will clear time for the occasional new artist as well as old favorites.

Of course I have additional private resolutions.  These are public, making them so was the first step to making them happen.

Writer Dad

Sean Platt is a ghostwriter for hire, specializing in custom blog posts.

Adios Papí, Un Tiempo Finalamente.

“Wrinkles should merely indicate where smiles have been.”

~Mark Twain

Yesterday we returned to my grandfather’s farewell.  Today, I’d like to visit some words, written a while before my grandfather passed.

During the last few years of Papí’s life, I drove to visit him every Saturday.  In the final month, it was a hospital bed where he lay, struggling for breath.  At the time, I was writing simple rhymes designed for children.  I’d hold Papi’s hand and read stories from a thin red binder; the same notebook I gave to my father for Father’s Day when I first told him I was writing.

Every week, Papí would lift his head from the sheets as I entered the room.

“Are you published yet?” he’d ask.

No, Papí,” I’d say.  “Not yet.

Thankfully, on the weekend before his last, I said, “Guess what, Papí?  I have a publisher, and they want to publish everything.

Besides the one about Santa, that might be the only lie I’ve ever felt comfortable with.  It’s certainly the only one I’ve ever been proud of.

At his eulogy, this was the song I sang:

Jose Ramos, Daddy, Papí.  A man impossible to copy,
with 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 unbelievably funny.  He valued fellowship far over money.
He always looked forward, without regret, and never abandoned a window to bet.
He meant so much to me in his immovable place.  Sometimes I look in the mirror and still see his face.

Ever since the time I was small, a sassy little know it all,
he and Honey guided me, to the best that I could be.
Every weekend of my youth, with conduct perhaps a little uncouth,
they took me in and they taught me well.  But more than just to speak and spell.
They taught 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 them a hand, or maybe an ear to understand.

The most significant lesson that I learned, a powerful example burned
(in my mind like I was branded), they both taught me single handed
how to treat my only other – as though the world could hold no other
one who could ever hope to 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 little kid, I know exactly how much 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 that I was mature, walking real tall and talking real 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

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Raise your hand if you’re doing too many things at once.  I’m talking about it at Eric’s today.  Check it out.

Swallowing Without Chewing

 

Yesterday, Vered from Momgrind made a comment that got me thinking.  Of course, that’s not hard.  The wind whistling past my ear will detour my thoughts, as long as I think it might be saying something different than it did the day before.  

But if something’s bouncing about my brain without much intention of leaving, than I have to believe that there’s something there worth considering, and Vered’s comment was rattling around for a while.

She mentioned that it’s pretty natural to scan articles while reading online.  

She couldn’t be more right.  

When I first started doing a lot of online reading, I allowed my eyes to float over every set of syllables.  Now, I swallow them as quickly as I can, as if they were the last hot waffles coming from a kitchen that’s closing in five minutes. 

I can’t imagine reading a book this way. 

Can you? 

Really? 

For me, it’s day and night.  A book isn’t something to race through, it’s a first date; slow and thoughtful and considerate.  The internet is like coming home and decompressing at the end of the day, after you’ve been married for twenty years:

Just the facts, Ma’am, just the facts. 

When I crack a spine, I want to be lost in a story, but when I lift the lid of my laptop, I want INFORMATION, and I digest it like a hungry alligator, chewing without swallowing, bouncing from one website to the next, in some insane race with myself to see how much I can consume, and how quickly I can do it.

Don’t get me wrong; I’m not condemning the behavior.  I love to learn this way, and a large part of why I go online thirty-seven thousand times each day is so that I can go to sleep slightly smarter than I was when I woke up, but I’d be lying if I said that I didn’t sometimes get a chill wondering about the information overload my children will be facing in another ten years.

Look how much the internet’s evolved in just a few short years.  This September, a good percentage of kids going off to college have no memory of life before the ubiquity of the internet.  What’s it going to be like for the pre-school set now?

My hopes are sky high.

For now, I choose to believe that some major sea change is right around the corner.  Our educational institutions are going to have to wake up and realize that they’re teaching in a way that was out of date back when I was sitting behind the desk making up funny limericks about my teacher.  

The internet’s still in diapers, and together, we share the task of raising it.  But as we shape that alternate landscape, so we shape ourselves.  My children see me on the computer a lot, but I make sure that at least once a day, they also see me with an old fashioned book in my hands and a quiet smile on my face.  

The internet is amazing, but we must never forget what got us here.

Writer Dad

Check out the updated post on reading online.  See if you can spot the changes.