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Open Poetry #46
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Sunshine
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Member Empyrean
since 1999-06-25
Posts 63354
Listening to every heart

0 posted 2010-12-09 10:38 PM





Who do you see?

Having cowboyed up,
farmed and ranched,
moved from waving
gold to gold-lined
streets, delivering
milk before hammering
nails, laying roofs
over laid carpet
providing others
comforts of home,
raised up four walls
of a little church
then took his bride
through the doors,

Jack of all trades
tracing boundaries by
masonry, keeping nights
light with a twist
of wire,
piping water to the
homes that
contained friends

He held tightly
to a sixth grade
education, established
a community’s business
with his wife....
a life
culminating
as a janitor to
make ends meet,
at a  
local high school

My high school

Perception: dismay

"That's your Dad?"  
Yes,
no prideful sound
coming through,  
acknowledging  
this man picked up
papers, cleaned
blackboards,
straightened desks,
swept up litter,
just "yes", until....

Perception: placate

Once, having to
find him before
going home,
what I found was....
"just" a janitor,
chatting with
a young man
having wandered into a
classroom that
dad was cleaning,
looking for an instructor

Perception: amaze

In passing moments,
worries of a slender
young man
were unburdened
to my wiry dad, who,
his sixth grade
education intact, lived
more life than
most professors,
having done
"the real thing",
there he stood,
listening to a young man
who questioned youth,
questioned coming
manhood,
ready to enter into
his own life....

"That your dad?"  YES!

Perceptions.  

What is perceived,
how it’s passed back out,
will always lead
back to one,
coloring
what passes
through one's soul....

Perceive well.


© Copyright 2010 Karilea Rilling Jungel - All Rights Reserved
Lori Grosser Rhoden
Member Patricius
since 2009-10-10
Posts 10202
Fair to middlin' of nowhere
1 posted 2010-12-09 10:47 PM


Oh my,this is wonderful! I can so relate.
JerryPat
Senior Member
since 2010-10-30
Posts 1991
Louisiana/America
2 posted 2010-12-09 11:07 PM


Yes indeed, I loved every line of this one, Sunshine. Fifth grade education can put to shame so many of the "titled" professors and their oh so snobbery ways. Yes, again, living life takes on an altogether new meaning when you have been down in the trenches. Learning through doing instead of reading. Common sense is the worlds greatest treasure and sadly we have lost it through the last fifty years or so.

"That your dad?"  YES!

My goodness yes.

http://swamprighter.wordpress.com/

pen&paper
Senior Member
since 2006-06-06
Posts 513

3 posted 2010-12-09 11:09 PM


So incredibly mind-blowing. Absolutely wonderful.
Alison
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Member Rara Avis
since 2008-01-27
Posts 9318
Lumpy oatmeal makes me crazy!
4 posted 2010-12-10 12:38 PM


This is what I was looking for tonight.  I didn't know it, but it is.

Thank you.

Love,
Alison

latearrival
Member Ascendant
since 2003-03-21
Posts 5499
Florida
5 posted 2010-12-10 02:05 AM


Karilea, I lived through the same experience as my dad and my husband were both truck drivers. You know from my past writing how much my dad meant to me. His 8th grad education was better than my high school one. So even thought I was sixteen when I became engaged, it was to a young man a lot like my dad, and we had 47 years together before Cancer won the battle.
When my daughter was in high school a male teacher was trying to influence the kids in the class by saying;” you don't want to grow up to be a truck driver do you". My wonderful young daughter stood up and said. "If it were not for truck drivers you would not have the material to have built this school, nor the books and supplies in it. You would not have food for the cafeteria", and on and on. I hope that teacher never again used that expression.

My husband had been in the Navy, having joined at seventeen and been in the battle of Leyte just before his 18th birthday so was certainly as good a man as this teacher.  

Nobody is "Just" an anything. Thank you for this, I love it. jo  

Marchmadness
Member Rara Avis
since 2007-09-16
Posts 9271
So. El Monte, California
6 posted 2010-12-10 02:31 AM


What a beautiful tribute to your father, Karilea. He obviously passed his true wisdom on to his daughter.
                         Ida

Prasad Nataraj
Senior Member
since 2008-05-29
Posts 1149
Bangalore,India
7 posted 2010-12-10 03:19 AM


Fine tribute to a fine man he must be. Many can surely relate to your words. And so do i, FIne writing.

"Hardwork pays in the long run"

Andrew Scott
Member Elite
since 1999-06-24
Posts 2558
Redlands,CA,USA
8 posted 2010-12-11 12:52 PM


My father has a high school education.  After serving 4 years in the Corp, and working various jobs, his carrer culminated in the manager of Patient Accounts for a major hospital, Vice President of a multi-million dollar collection agency, and President of a one of California's largest Credit Unions. I've always considered my father as having a PHD in smarts. He once told me he would have rather been a lineman for GTE... that he hated having worked in an office all his life.
As a teacher, I always try to push higher education as a means to getting further along in life. But, I also recognize that the world needs ditch diggers and what you do for a living does not dictate the quality or character of the individual. Thanks for sharing your work. Sorry if I rambled on. Peace.  

"We'll chase them like rats across the tundra."

Honeybunch
Member Rara Avis
since 2001-12-29
Posts 7115
South Africa
9 posted 2010-12-11 01:44 PM


Wonderful piece, Karilea, and a great tribute to your father.  

Helen

Martie
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Member Empyrean
since 1999-09-21
Posts 28049
California
10 posted 2010-12-11 03:46 PM


Sissie...I love how your love for your father and your realization that you were proud of him, brought out the thoughts of others about their own father-love.  The measure of what makes a worthwhile person can be seen in the eyes of their children.
Balladeer
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since 1999-06-05
Posts 25505
Ft. Lauderdale, Fl USA
11 posted 2010-12-11 04:04 PM


Special K, this ranks for me as the best you have done....beautiful.
nakdthoughts
Member Laureate
since 2000-10-29
Posts 19200
Between the Lines
12 posted 2010-12-12 05:46 AM


I agree with Michael...this is one of your best.

Those were different times back then and my father never finished high school either but had to go to war, married my mom, worked 3 jobs sometimes to support the five of us and then started his own business.

Higher education can sometimes be the easy way out depending on what you want your future to be and if it's the money that is the most important and not the background needed for a specific career. As a (substitute) teacher now, I am always  telling the very young students to come to school ready to learn so that they can decide later on in life what it is they want to do to be able to live the way they wish.

Our world needs all kinds of people in all kinds of jobs. And no one should ever be thought of as invaluable.

M

Margherita
Member Seraphic
since 2003-02-08
Posts 22236
Eternity
13 posted 2010-12-12 02:58 PM


There is so much heart and so much wisdom in this beautiful write, dear Karilea. A joy to read and to absorb as a treasure.

Love,
Margherita

Inspired-8
Member
since 2008-04-14
Posts 311
Pluto
14 posted 2010-12-12 03:08 PM


Well chosen words of few your verse speaks volumns of wisdom in my fav minimalistic theme simply outstanding!

cheers
vic

vandana
Deputy Moderator 5 Tours
Member Patricius
since 1999-10-22
Posts 10463
USA
15 posted 2010-12-12 05:57 PM



Klassy Lassy
Member Elite
since 2005-06-28
Posts 2187
Oregon
16 posted 2010-12-12 09:43 PM


Life lessons are the making of a man.  Book smart is ok, heart smart and ingenius is superb.  It looks to me--and I read this three times--as if your papa was one of the best!
ethome
Member Patricius
since 2000-05-14
Posts 11858
New Brunswick Canada
17 posted 2010-12-14 02:51 AM


Too true Karilea.

The surface of most everything is shallow but in depth lies all the treasures of life.
What a great write! We imperfect humans so quick to judge are trapped within our own boundaries unless we open up to all the perceptions available to us.

Loved it!!

Eric

serenity blaze
Member Empyrean
since 2000-02-02
Posts 27738

18 posted 2010-12-14 03:21 AM


I'm afraid I lack the perception others have displayed; I am a tad bit confused.

sigh

write me

I got lost about stanza three...

Dark Stranger
Member Patricius
since 2001-03-19
Posts 13631
West Coast
19 posted 2010-12-14 06:57 AM


ms sun..enjoyed the pure form of the gentleman...not covered with perceptions..

enjoyed you ms

Tim
Senior Member
since 1999-06-08
Posts 1794

20 posted 2010-12-20 10:35 PM


Been away for a while, glad I stopped back,
I agree, one your best.

Spiros Zafiris
Senior Member
since 2002-10-20
Posts 982
Canada
21 posted 2010-12-21 03:56 AM


..hi Sunshine..>>never fails; always
a calming pleasure, reading a Sunshine
poem; thanks..>>spiros

secondhanddreampoet
Member Ascendant
since 2006-11-07
Posts 6394
a 'Universalist' !
22 posted 2010-12-21 02:43 PM


well said ... fine 'write' !!
vandana
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Member Patricius
since 1999-10-22
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USA
23 posted 2010-12-21 07:04 PM


nice
Mysteria
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Member Laureate
since 2001-03-07
Posts 18328
British Columbia, Canada
24 posted 2010-12-21 09:20 PM


Not sure how I missed this (maybe I should drop in more regularly.)  Anyway, this speaks volumes to the judgments made on people before we know them.  Some of the smartest people I have ever known, had literally no education, but brother did they have life skills.  That is something no education can supply.  Well done Karilea, and Merry Christmas.
LeeJ
Member Patricius
since 2003-06-19
Posts 13296

25 posted 2010-12-22 04:09 PM


Oh Sunny, this was indeed an amazing tribute...absolutely stunning...and one of my favorites of yours...with a dad like that, no wonder your amazing...

Hugs and Merry Christmas
Lee J.

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