Our Visit to the Nashville Rescue Mission

Hi All,

Hope you’re having an amazing holiday season. As for us, we didn’t get to sleep on Christmas Eve until passed midnight because our daughter (like most other kids) just could not get to sleep so Mom turned on a Harry Potter CD and after a while she was out. Of course, she was back up at 5 a.m. at which time we opened our gifts but then suddenly found ourselves waking up on the couch 2 hours later not fully realizing that we had all fallen asleep. After waking up we had fun with our daughter in playing with her new stuff. Incidentally, I highly recommend Connect Four Launchers. It’s a blast. I also started a tradition with my wife which was to write her a Christmas letter. She cried. Not sure if that was before or after I woke up though.

As far as what we did today I don’t think that I’ll use the word charity work even though going to homeless shelters and missions is how it’s described. It sounds too disconnected to me. Part of what we do we do so out of caring for people so to a small degree it’s relational work. I don’t want to do something like this just for the sake of saying I did it or to boast about it but to really care and to teach our daughter that there is caring in doing. It’s not enough to say that you care about someone. You actually have to do something about it otherwise (at least, to me) they are empty words.on’

My wife and I had done this type of thing many times before so now it was our daughter’s time to join us.

One thing I will say in boasting (mostly for posterity should my daughter ever read this later) that I was immensely proud at how hard our daughter worked today. Even better, she did it with a joyful heart. She wanted to do it and would not stand idly by when there was something that needed to be done.

She wasn’t satisfied with scrubbing walls and tables. She wanted to serve the meals and she was adamant about it. I’ll be honest in saying that we don’t like to wait around too long when we’re hungry but since we were feeding others she pushed through our lunchtime and truly placed the needs of others ahead of her own. She did well and we all had fun doing it. We even made some new friends today who were a joy to work with. Maria, Danielle and the others…thank you for making it fun for us. 

As far as the Nashville Rescue Mission itself goes, they do an amazing job. The kitchen was spotless and they had the operation fine-tuned. We plan on going back and encourage you to find one like it of your preference. It’s not charity work. It’s a relational effort. And with the economy the way it is I’m sure that there are a lot of us that are one or two paychecks away from being on the other side of the food line.

Chat soon,

Lenny

Leonardo Ramirez is an author of prose fiction and graphic novels in the genres of Young Adult and Children’s Books.

For more information please visit http://www.leonardoverse.com.

Merry Christmas!

Just wanted to wish you all a very Merry Christmas. Hope that your holidays are safe and that you’re surrounded by those that you love and hold dear. Thank you for your kindness and for your support but more importantly, thanks for being my friend.

May all of your dreams come true.

Chat soon,
Lenny
Leonardo Ramirez is an author of prose fiction and graphic novels in the genres of Young Adult and Children’s Books.
For more information please visit http://www.leonardoverse.com.
Want to follow this blog? Visit http://leonardoverse.blogspot.com

Six Days Until Christmas

Hope you’re all doing well and that you’re either close or done with your Christmas shopping With only 6 days to Christmas I’ve only got one item to get for my honey and then I’m done. It’s been really tight for us this year and even though my wife and I are both blessed to have jobs we’ve been in the spot where so many find themselves in now and have had to scrape by so my prayers this year are with those who are anxiously standing by as the bills pile up waiting for that phone call telling them that they’re hired. We’ve been there and remember those days vividly. I took a pay cut to take the job I have now. It’s obviously been a tough year for everyone so my hope is that all of us come to appreciate our relationships, our families and the love that we share with those close to us. To help us remember to count our blessings and give the gift of relationship we’ll be with the Nashville Rescue Mission on the day after Christmas. My wife and I both share a special place in our hearts for homeless women and children so together with our daughter we’ll be celebrating with them.

Update on Stuff

I’ve been working diligently on the business plan for the publishing entity that we’re setting up and I’m getting some much needed help and guidance. I’ve never created a business plan before so I have to admit the task is a little intimidating and testing of my decision to do it despite everything I had written in my previous post about self-publishing. My problem is that whenever I decide to take on a task I get right to it and keep at it until it’s done. That’s always been my Achilles’ heel. It takes time so once again I’m learning the need for patience. I’ve got to learn to take my time with this and being the guy shows up five minutes early to the party isn’t a help in this matter. In the plus column, I’ve always made it a point to surround myself with folks who are smarter than I in a given area and my new friend Al Kirwan certainly fits that bill. He ran his own business for 20 years and I’m grateful for him. Another person who I am very grateful to call my friend is Tim Bowles. If not for him this process would not have even started. He’s always been very supportive of my work and gently prompted me in this direction. I’ve never met anyone who was more gifted in the area of business networking and mindset than Tim. The man knows his stuff. I’ll still be honest in saying that I’ll be even more grateful when this part of the plan is over!

With that said I’ll be checking in periodically but still be working on the business plan. I’ll be off starting Wednesday so I’ll be spending some much needed downtime with my family. I think we’re going to Cracker Barrel on Wednesday morning for pancakes.

Maybe I’ll see you there!

Have a wonderful and joyous Christmas and a happy Hanukkah!

Chat soon!
Lenny

Leonardo Ramirez is an author of prose fiction and graphic novels in the genres of Young Adult and Children’s Books. For more information please visit http://www.leonardoverse.com.

Thanks for reading!

The Pitfalls of Busy-ness

As I mentioned in a previous post when my wife and I first got married we were super-busy to the point where we had something scheduled 6 nights a week – not something I would recommend any newly-married couple do. Don’t get me wrong, our marriage is still going great and strong but even though for a season we’ve managed to find some balance in our lives we are now beginning to feel those pains creeping up on us again with our daughter and the pressures that standardized tests add to a family and I’m sure we’re not alone.

Here are some things that we as a family always need to remind ourselves.

Kids Won’t Always Make Straight A’s or B’s and that’s OK.

We do praise our daughter when she makes good grades and encourage her to study hard but with the pace and pressure that kids are under to perform well in standardized tests she has little/no energy when she gets home to study or do homework for another two hours. Again, we encourage her to do her best but we have to be realistic and acknowledge that grades will fluctuate. With that in mind, we remind her that we are proud of her no matter what. As far as I know there aren’t that many dolphin trainers out there that use algebra when they’re blowing that whistle. And no, you don’t have to have a degree in marine biology to be a dolphin trainer. I checked. That’s not to say that you won’t ever use it. The key word here is balance. Please don’t misunderstand, I’m all for studying hard but we have to live as we work.

Life Was Meant to Be Enjoyed

I still overdo it sometimes. I’ve got karate 3 times a week, my writing to keep up with and now I’m trying to form a publishing company. Then there’s family. No matter what you do you’re going to upset someone about stepping back. It shouldn’t be your family that takes the hit. I still struggle with this one because I do believe that if you don’t work you don’t eat and I do want to leave something for my daughter but not at the expense of my relationship with my family.

Speaking of Busy

On a side note, Ronan has been hard at work on the gadgets for the new steampunk children’s series, Jupiter Chronicles. He sent me a picture of the unfinished steam rifle which is looking pretty awesome. I’ll wait to show it to you when he’s done. When the time comes to shoot the cover art, my buddy Poochie Mars will be in charge of that. The process will be a little different to where we’ll have two kids dressed in steampunk clothing with Ronan’s gadgets and we’ll have a photo shoot of them complete with garb. Poochie Mars will then take photos and add some Photoshop magic to the images until we get the look that we want and he’ll design the cover from there.

Should be fun.

Finally, I’ll be taking a few days off of blogging (but not more than a week). I’ve mentioned before that I’d like to start a publishing entity so I need to focus on a business plan for the next few days.

Until then, don’t forget to live.

Chat soon,
Lenny

Leonardo Ramirez is an author of prose fiction and graphic novels in the genres of Young Adult and Children’s Books. For more information please visit http://www.leonardoverse.com.

Top 10 Things I Would Change if I Had a Time Machine

It’s Top 10 Friday!
Welcome to the first edition of Top 10 Friday where topics are kept light and fun (for the most part) so that we can end the week on a happy note. After all, it is Friday…right?
Here we go…
Top 10 Things I Would Change if I Had a Time Machine
  1. I would “un-date” every girl I dated before I met my wife.
  2. Made sure Joe Biden got that acceptance letter to mime school or speech therapy.
  3. Come up with Facebook and actually use it for good instead of political positioning.
  4. Call for a limit to the number of rebooted movies produced. Enough already!
  5. Become an activist against fat-free, low calorie, diet and decaf.
  6. Write a collection of children’s books about bears eating politicians.
  7. Add term limits to the constitution.
  8. Establish an activist meatarian movement across the street from PETA HQ.
  9. Require members of Congress to live in a homeless shelter for one year prior to service, do missions work for another year and live in a hut while they serve as they abide by the same rules they impose.
  10. I would not have walked in front of that steel swing. That set off a chain reaction, I think.
Got some of your own? Feel free to share! Hope you have a great  and safe weekend!
Chat soon,
Lenny
Leonardo Ramirez is an author of prose fiction and graphic novels in the genres of Young Adult and Children’s Books. For more information please visit http://www.leonardoverse.com.
Want to follow this blog? Visit http://leonardoverse.blogspot.com

Where has the Magic of Hollywood Creativity Gone?

I recently visited a group of talented writers in the Living WritersCollective and shared some of the character development techniques I used. After the presentation, I got to chat with a few of them and after perusing some of their blogs there is clearly talent there. In fact, I haven’t done a show or presentation where someone has not walked up to me afterwards and shared some of their work with me which I love to see.
So if there is ample talent out there why then the obsession with reboots from Hollywood? Granted there have been a few that I’ve enjoyed (Star Trek, Battlestar Galactica, Batman Begins) but it really seems like the Hollywood spark is either gone or needs to be reinvented somehow.

Hmmm, reinvented. I like the sound of that.

With that said, here is a list of more reboots coming to a theater near you.

Flight of the Navigator

http://www.slashfilm.com/disney-to-remake-flight-of-the-navigator/

Poltergeist

http://www.mania.com/producer-talks-poltergeist-old-boy_article_131670.html

Heavy Metal (although I’ve enjoyed Robert Rodriguez’ work)

http://kzok.radio.com/2011/07/25/robert-rodriguez-to-direct-new-heavy-metal-movie/

Highlander

http://www.beyondhollywood.com/category/highlander-remake-2010-movie/

National Lampoon’s Vacation (this is more of a “next generation” type movie)

http://www.empireonline.com/news/story.asp?NID=25995

Short Circuit

http://www.filmjunk.com/2011/08/05/short-circuit-remake-gets-a-new-director/

I hear there’s even something in the works for “Gilligan’s Island”.

Really?
Chat soon!
Lenny

Leonardo Ramirez is an author of prose fiction and graphic novels in the genres of Young Adult and Children’s Books. For more information please visit http://www.leonardoverse.com.

The Myth of Raising Scores in Standardized Tests

It is no secret that the prime example which proponents use in the argument to raise scores via standardized tests is China. Upon the first results of international test scores released that included China (see the article here), the New York Times touted the communist country’s “stunning” results that were ahead of the pack.

With this information coming from the New York Times it should be no surprise that these results are seen in a favorable light. What is inexcusable is what the article leaves out which are the mitigating factors that contribute to the high scores.

Persons who are more than happy to jump on the “American kids are stupid” train also have a predisposition to ignore factors (and too willingly accept whatever the latest craze in education may be) but for those willing to argue against this mindset, here are the “forgotten” facts.

It is Illegal to Have More than One Child in China

What does this mean and what does it have to do with test scores? It means that for every child enrolled in the school system there is at least two or three at home who are denied an education. These kids are sent to work in a labor-oriented vocation (agriculture or manufacturing pirated products) that does not require an education. To use an analogy, I teach martial arts. Teaching in those conditions would be the equivalent of removing all of the students who do not have a black belt and thus lowering the number of students enrolled in the program. The level of skills of those left in the program would skyrocket (since the focus would be on them) and everyone would have a black belt! Education for a select few.

Too bad for everyone else.

Lack of Creativity

Those privileged enough to enter the educational system in China suffer from a sever lack of creativity and ingenuity according to Yong Zhao, a Michigan State professor born and raised in China. His book, “Catching Up or Leading the Way” rails on America’s obsession with standardized testing while 44 percent of Chinese executives are not able to find the talent needed to compete worldwide. Zhao cautions Americans not to “throw out our DNA” in a stunning article that can be found here.

As I alluded in a previous post with respect to this subject, ingenuity and creativity can be found in abundance in America where application is still taught unlike China whose teaching style is reflected in facts and meaningless figures.

Our goal should not be to train our children to be great test-takers. It should be to think critically and creatively. According to an article in The Globalist (seen here), there is a call for a reforming of the school system….in China. It seems that China is just now beginning to realize that their schools are lacking in creativity and are crying for their schools to become more like America…..free.

Oh the irony.

With respect to actual unemployment figures, China’s true numbers cannot be measured since children who are ousted from the educational system are put into the labor workforce and are not counted into the system. Migrant workers add to the unreliability of figures provided by Labor statistics. There is simply no way to tell how many children are being left out of the chance to obtain an education since according to the law they don’t exist.

In reference to the aforementioned difference in teaching style, according to China Insight (here), personal expression is discouraged as is classroom participation. Information is relayed from teacher to student and the student is expected to quietly absorb it. Just the facts! In all fairness, I will say that I do like the emphasis on respect. There is, however, a fine line between respect and censorship of ideas.

Chinese children spend an average of 8 hours a day in class and their entrance into college is solely based on what score they get on their last assessment exam (talk about pressure!). Children who are exhausted and overly pressured cannot apply what they’ve learned. Try it sometime.

Here is a list of things invented by “lagging” American children:

The Steam Engine

The Locomotive

The Telephone

The Automobile

Electricity

Photography

Aqualung

Braille

Refrigerator

Radio

The Airplane

Radio Astronomy

Defibrillator

Polio Vaccine

Integrated Circuit

Laser

Artificial Heart

Optic Fiber

The Space Shuttle

Cellphones

MRI

The Internet

The iPod, iPhone, iPad and now…AppleTV.

Here’s a list of things invented in China.

Tea

Explosives

Paper

Printing

Grain Storage

Horse Harness

All of these were invented before the end of the 19th century.

Please understand that I do love the Chinese people so I am absolutely not trying to vilify them. When I say I love them I mean it. Because of the inherent desire for freedom that all men and women share (whether realized or not) I’m sure that there are children this very moment working in their fields that are starving for the same opportunities as their firstborn sibling or for that matter, the average American. If only we could appreciate what we have.

My heart goes out to those forgotten children.

What I do take issue with is that the creativity and innovation that is embedded in the DNA of every American child could be subject to a teaching method that results in stifled thought and censorship in expression and innovation. That individualism is suppressed and the freedom to create something that has never been created before be lost in a sea of test scores. That the philosophies of a foreign country would in time come to dominate the mindsets of our children and an “invasion” of our children’s hearts and soil would take place right underneath our very noses one step at a time.

We seem to be so eager to surrender and denigrate ourselves, our country and our children when the solution easily lies in the restoration of our families and self-reliance and responsibility, in apprenticeships that teach our young people a good work ethic and in creativity that is permitted to thrive. I personally grow tired of hearing that our children are stupid (or that they’re not up to par) and that our teachers need to sacrifice their families so that they can be like the Chinese or Finnish. Teaching is a calling that can only be answered by the truly called. I dare anyone who is not called to teach to do it. You won’t last very long and if you do, you’re not a very good one and you should be stripped of tenure. As far as the comparison game goes, I don’t know about you but I find great offense in telling my child, “I wish you were more like Coco the Mindless Robot. She makes better grades”. I’d rather just help her with her math homework and tell her she can do better because she is capable of it. Do I believe in measuring our kids’ progress?

Of course! Let’s just keep it in the context of exceptionalism and not comparative.

I would tell her there is nothing that she can’t accomplish if she works hard.

Chat soon!

Lenny

Leonardo Ramirez is an author of prose fiction and graphic novels in the genres of Young Adult and Children’s Books.

For more information please visit http://www.leonardoverse.com.

Thanks for reading!

Where I’ve Been (Part Three)

Hi Friends,Sorry for the lapse between posts but I had a root canal that went bad and the tooth had to be removed (it was very stubborn too!). The procedure took over two hours and was very painful so I’m still recovering from that. I’m sure I’ll be back to myself in no time.On to today’s post. If you’re new to the blog I’ve been periodically posting a bio of sorts. There is a point that I’ll hit on at the end of the series. There’s only more more after this one so please bare with me.

Part One of this series can be found here. Part Two, here.

When I arrived in Houston I found that my mom was not living in the best of conditions. She was in a one-bedroom apartment with very little room for me which is to say that there wasn’t a whole lot of disclosure when it came to how things would be when I got there (i.e. she wanted me there). I needed money right away so I nabbed the first job that I came across which was laying pipe for the water company. That’s right, I’m proud to say that I was a ditch digger. To this day, I’m not clear on why we didn’t use backhoes but I needed the money so I did it. The job was short-lived (it killed my back) so I grabbed the next best thing which was tarp-rigging for an extermination company. Those things are pretty darn heavy especially when you have to climb up a ladder a story or two. I also washed vans for the phone company and played the part of assistant electrician. Don’t ever ask me to wire anything. Believe me when I say that I don’t know what I’m doing.
After a while I landed at an original art publishing company called Somerset House. I also went back to school  for two years and maintained a 4.0 GPA. That was my home for the next 11 years. I still keep in touch with some of the folks there. I started scribbling words onto paper hear and there around this time and fell instantly in love with the craft.

I got to visit to visit the Treasury Department in Washington DC and get sniffed in private places by a trained German Shepherd. The Smithsonian was amazing. The Vietnam Memorial was stirring to my soul. The highlight for me was visiting the Lincoln Memorial.

On the way to Washington I drove through Nashville, Tennessee and although I was here for only a day there was something about it that gave me a peace.

A friend of mine that worked at Somerset owned a Piper Cub. He took me up once and even let me take the stick for a while. I’ll never forget that.

While in Houston I sang with the Houston Masterworks Chorus. There’s an arrow pointing to my big noodle towards the left of the center.

I was very involved in the church I was attending at the time. In fact, they had a school of ministry that I enrolled in. The school was set up to not just to educate but to spiritually develop those enrolled. That is to say that you didn’t have to have the goal of becoming a minister at a church or anything like that. And as odd as this may sound it was very grueling. The lessons were not just in Bible scripture or theology. The intense course of study there was humility. Mission trips to Mexico, scrubbing toilets and serving others was the medium and if you “survived” you were actually ordained by the church and state if you wished to go on to a seminary. I also got to lead the folks we visited in song which was fun.

Those who know me are saying to themselves this very second, “Really? You were ordained? No way!” Yup. It’s something that you have to keep up (which I didn’t) so please don’t ask me to perform any wedding ceremonies for your cocker spaniel. The only reason I didn’t stay current with my licensing is because I don’t feel the need to. I didn’t do it to go on to seminary. I simply wanted the experience of having done all the things that the school does. I think that in part, it was my way of proving to myself that I wasn’t as prideful as my father was. I needed to know beyond a shadow of any doubt that I didn’t have the pride issues that I saw in him. Besides, I’m enjoying my life as a writer and that’s what I’m supposed to do.

It was there that I also met my beautiful bride, Kristen. She was enrolled in the school as well. She already had a Bachelors in Early Childhood Development and had her own reasons for attending. The first time I saw her I was driving away from the church and I saw her walking to her car (an old beat up bluish-grey Honda Civic). That’s when I knew she was mine.

I’m getting closer to that happy ending.
Leonardo Ramirez is an author of prose fiction and graphic novels in the genres of Young Adult and Children’s Books. For more information please visit http://www.leonardoverse.com.
Want to follow this blog? Visit http://leonardoverse.blogspot.com