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I wonder, If you were still alive At 104 years old today, If you would have been proud of me, If you would have liked what you saw. You knew me as the toddler Who insistently took your hand Before crossing the busy Chinatown street, But not as the awkward teenager, Anger simmering beneath his acne-riddled face, Eager to prove his growth, Trying too hard with his vitriolic rants,   Neither as the young man Floundering about in his twenties, Dissipated on intoxicants,   Groping about for direction, Pining for a woman's companionship, Nor as the married man Who had attained independence, Having found a way in life, But now longing to regress to boyhood, Sublimating his regrets in bad poetry Scribbled between issuing memos and contracts. Just what did you see in that toddler's future As he waddled across the bumpy cement streets Dappled with horse manure spilled from kalesas? Did you see a man with broad shoulders, Employing hundreds and feeding their families, Making a tidy profit week after week? Or perhaps an academician, Erudite and eloquent, a debate juggernaut, A far cry from his forefathers' humble beginnings In some fishing village from Bumfuck, Nowhere, China? Or did you just hope For your grandson to retain his heart The same one that prompted him To take your hand as you crossed the street? I still think of you at times And wonder how things would have been Had you been around, If you would have bore our valley days With your trademark stoicism, Anchored father with your presence, And have finally reined in Grandmother's bladed tongue, If we would have eventually shared Your daily quart of brandy After weathering with ascetic patience The sound and fury of idiots. How you would have seen With your own eyes The clan flourish and increase In members, clout, and material wealth, How you would have sat Stone-faced but proud As I took my steps to patriarchy And started my own tribe, Albeit with someone outside our race - Worse yet, a descendant Of our colonizers from the war. (I wonder how much convincing How much yelling from father It would have taken For you to relent) I know I look back too much. I guess there are too many unexplored paths, Too many phantoms who remained acquaintances. Or maybe I'm just like father, Habitually framing the present With the context of the past, Always romanticizing the bygone With the wine of sentiment, Though reality would have been harder, drier, And we needed the magic of romance To make reminiscence palatable. Thirty years have decayed my memory of you To but a reconstructed charcoal sketch   But it does not make me miss you any less.
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May 19, 2020
May 19, 2020 at 10:20 PM UTC
Letter to Grandfather
I wonder, If you were still alive At 104 years old today, If you would have been proud of me, If you would have liked what you saw. You knew me as the toddler Who insistently took your hand Before crossing the busy Chinatown street, But not as the awkward teenager, Anger simmering beneath his acne-riddled face, Eager to prove his growth, Trying too hard with his vitriolic rants,   Neither as the young man Floundering about in his twenties, Dissipated on intoxicants,   Groping about for direction, Pining for a woman's companionship, Nor as the married man Who had attained independence, Having found a way in life, But now longing to regress to boyhood, Sublimating his regrets in bad poetry Scribbled between issuing memos and contracts. Just what did you see in that toddler's future As he waddled across the bumpy cement streets Dappled with horse manure spilled from kalesas? Did you see a man with broad shoulders, Employing hundreds and feeding their families, Making a tidy profit week after week? Or perhaps an academician, Erudite and eloquent, a debate juggernaut, A far cry from his forefathers' humble beginnings In some fishing village from Bumfuck, Nowhere, China? Or did you just hope For your grandson to retain his heart The same one that prompted him To take your hand as you crossed the street? I still think of you at times And wonder how things would have been Had you been around, If you would have bore our valley days With your trademark stoicism, Anchored father with your presence, And have finally reined in Grandmother's bladed tongue, If we would have eventually shared Your daily quart of brandy After weathering with ascetic patience The sound and fury of idiots. How you would have seen With your own eyes The clan flourish and increase In members, clout, and material wealth, How you would have sat Stone-faced but proud As I took my steps to patriarchy And started my own tribe, Albeit with someone outside our race - Worse yet, a descendant Of our colonizers from the war. (I wonder how much convincing How much yelling from father It would have taken For you to relent) I know I look back too much. I guess there are too many unexplored paths, Too many phantoms who remained acquaintances. Or maybe I'm just like father, Habitually framing the present With the context of the past, Always romanticizing the bygone With the wine of sentiment, Though reality would have been harder, drier, And we needed the magic of romance To make reminiscence palatable. Thirty years have decayed my memory of you To but a reconstructed charcoal sketch   But it does not make me miss you any less.
May 20, 1916 - February 10, 1989 Happy birth anniversary.
twoweekbender
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May 19, 2020
May 19, 2020 at 10:20 PM UTC
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