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 Tall, Tall Man

“Memory is a child walking along a seashore.  You never can tell what small pebble it will pick up and store away among its treasured things.”

~Pierce Harris, Atlanta Journal

Max’s eyebrows crawl together and his upper lip is swallowed by the lower.  “The library?” he asks.  His nose is scrunched because he knows the answer’s no.

I shake my head.  Max is on his three-hundred and forty-seventh guess, give or take.  “Try again.”

“Ummmmm…” he elasticizes his m’s until they are almost at a chant.  “Disneyland?”

I would say his predictions are growing outlandish, except that three queries back he guessed Texas, and we definitely had no intention of crossing any significant border.

“The park where they have a statue of the tall, tall man?”

I say “No,” but this particular guess sees me scooping Max up, spinning him around and tossing him on the bed.  “Guess again.”

The tall, tall man is Abraham Lincoln, who happens to have a statue at a park we haven’t stepped foot on since Max was only two.

The answer was the movies, just in case you (like Max) are dying from suspense.  We were planning to see Bolt.  One of our clients gifted us cinema and Pixar light sounded grand.

“The garbage dump?”

I shake my head.

“The beach?”

“Too cold, buddy.”

At this point, Max has been guessing for nearly forty minutes, and I’m a bit shocked he hasn’t yet swished the net.  He’s been to the movies a handful of times, which is more than I can say for Texas, the Island of Sodor, or Japan, which added together climb to the sum total of never.

“Outer Space?” his voice hits a pitch revealing his knowledge of the nonsensical nature of his giddy little guess.

“Yes!” I exclaim.

“No, we can not do that.”  Max shakes his head and drops to his knees in a fit of giggles.

Max never did guess, but it wasn’t for lack of trying.  Amazingly, he never quit.  No matter how many times he yielded a negative, he kept pecking around in search of a positive.

But that’s not what this story’s about.

Max was undaunted sure, but the reason I’m passing this story to forever is because of the wide reach of my little man’s recall.

If my boy can remember the park with the tall, tall man, and we haven’t stepped foot in the shade of that American giant in half of Max’s lifetime, then there are a hundred million other moments inside his subconscious waiting for their resurrection, and a multiplicity that are only marking time until their birth.

I can’t control every machination of my children’s lives, nor would I ever want to.  They will choose what to make and who to make it with.  They are with me now though, and most of their minutes are within my orbit.  I can make sure to manage what is rolling down the conveyor belt in front of me.

Writer Dad

Sean Platt is a dad, ghostwriter for hire, and occasional potty training expert.