Conversations For Transformation

Essays By Laurence Platt

Inspired By The Ideas Of Werner Erhard

And More



Poet Laureate

Chicago, Illinois, USA

August 8, 2004



This essay, Poet Laureate, is the companion piece to A Different Set Of Rules.

It is also the second in an open group Encounters With A Friend:
  1. Showing Up
  2. Poet Laureate
  3. A Man In The Crowd
  4. Real Men Cry
  5. A Different Set Of Rules
  6. Half Life
  7. Waiting On You
  8. Erotica On Schedule
  9. A House On Franklin Street
  10. NeXT
  11. Reflection On A Window
so far, in that order.




He's sitting in a chair. It's one of the most remarkable things I ever saw in my life: that man just sitting in that chair.

You may ask: "What's remarkable about something so mundane as a person sitting in a chair?".

The thing is you never  see a person just sitting in a chair. A person sitting in a chair is never just sitting in the chair. When they're sitting in a chair they're doing something else other than just sitting in the chair. They're thinking. They're looking around. They're fidgeting. In fact when they're sitting in a chair they're doing everything but  just sitting in the chair.

He's just sitting in a chair. It's both disconcerting and mesmerizing to witness.

I ponder out loud whether the spiritual paradigm is the source of the human paradigm, or whether the human paradigm is the source of the spiritual paradigm. He watches me with crystal steel blue eyes which seem to twinkle a joke, the punchline of which he knows but doesn't want to spoil for me, and he says, firmly, "Don't know!" in that rich, deep, Philadelphian accent, the hint of a smile flickering across his face.

There's no doubt  in him as to who he is for himSelf. None. Zero. And it's not that he has no doubt in that regard because he's handled doubt - if that were so, it would mean there was doubt. No, it's not that. He has ... no ... doubt.

During our meeting I jokingly say he being the "king" makes me the "court jester". He looks up from his work and just stares at me ...

"OK OK" I say. "How about 'Poet Laureate' then?".

"Much better" he says slowly, going back to his work.



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