Father’s burden..
Father’s burden.
A Poem by Coyote Poetry
My father taught me to appreciate laughter, children and woman. ![]()
Father’s burden..
(My father was a Ojibwa/Mexican man in 1950 USA. He never allowed anyone to look down at him.)
Father didn’t drive no Cadillac.
He drove a old Pontiac.
He never complains.
He worked his 50 hours a week.
Paid his bills and drank his drink.
He got loud with his friends.
He likes the rum.
When the rum was plenty.
I heard him wish for things to be different.
He wanted his children to have all the good things.
All children had.
He told me to get a education so no-one will look down at you.
Father never had a lot.
He has learn to accept little.
I remember one Winter evening.
When he has too much rum.
He packed up the car,
he wanted to escape to California.
We would drive a few miles and he would fall asleep.
A attempt to escape his world.
With no escape for this Ojibwa/ Mexican man.
Sometime I drink the whiskey.
I laugh like my father.
Thank to men like him.
So many walls had fell down.
So I could have a good life.
My children can be proud to be Ojibwa/Mexican man or woman.
Father drove a old Pontiac.
He loved that old car.
John(COYOTE
So much sadness today, Coyote.
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My father memory isn’t a sad one. He was a strong man. He never complained. He went forward. Thank you dear Sassy for reading and the comment.
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Beautiful tribute to your father, dear John.
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Thank you my dear friend. He fought in two major wars and he was never right.
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Nobody is ever right, unless they defend their own.
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