Over at D'Verse they're talking about Wild Things. Stop on over for the beer, but stick around for the poetry on tap. Cheers.
When I was a child
I could care less
where the wild
things were…for I already
knew, it wasn't a them
but a him, yep, Charlie
Sheen, in one of
the funniest films on
baseball every made…the
original one people…the original
But as I mentioned
in the opening line
I was a child. Yes,
a child but not a child
without interests..that's for certain.
I saw those many monsters
atop lunch pails, on books
kids were reading with some
attendant I had far too early
a crush on. But hey, that's
pre-pubesence, yep…
I actually remember one kid
I knew, he had his math book
covered in wild things print, I had
a plain grocery bag cut to fit…I'm
who I am, and he's…well I really
don't know, never cared to...,
but now that you got me thinking about
it, I know a guy who knows a guy who
knows a girl that could probably tell me…
But I was a kid, a kid that liked what he liked
and knew what he thought he liked and those
drawings never impressed me much…nope
I preferred transformers, GI Joes and comic
art…thought these wild things were embarrassing
to be considered in the same industry that could boast the likes of Frank Miller..yep
wolver-fn-rine. Now that was a wild thing, for sure, with
bones made of invincible steel that could protrude from his
knuckles as he saw fit and a body that self healed…yeah, that
dude was badass…and his name was Logan for crying out loud, now
that's a name…
But I was a child back then and didn't really appreciate many of
the things I do today…I didn't know the first thing about the ologies,
nope, Psychology, Philosophy, Sociology, these things were not a sprig
on my uneaten dinner plates….
But, today, things are a bit different…and I look at things with a much broader view, one filled with an appreciation for novel creations, uniqueness and open to suggestion/acceptance…
So, while I still don't particularly think these wild things are the prize of the art world, I appreciate what they are, and how they do what they do…
lines that reek of instability
Disproportions mirroring the inner mind
Monsters…a metaphor….yep
for society and for our own personas…we most certainly can be and it's important to understand this, and it's important for us to embrace this, so we can keep them under wraps…
So…long story a bit longer than intended here….that dude crafted some pretty deep things there in his wildest of imaginations come to life…and that
is
cool.
Very cool.
And who would have ever thought
A child would have to mature
to enjoy what a monster represents.
And it's sad when anyone passes before there time, but at least, this author got to spread so much of his imagination to children everywhere, and to late blooming adults as well...
Showing posts with label Maturing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maturing. Show all posts
Saturday, May 12, 2012
Wednesday, February 2, 2011
A Mothers' Tear
Inhale. Orange zest and lemon curls, bouquets sculpt with wild flowers
Geometric ruffling in decorative lace
Devoured by the flavor amidst scripted parsimony,
That leave some so uninspired, yet
As a child I would attend the gala every year,
Chicken cordon bleu, cheese pouring out
Into puddles, infringing upon the green beans,
Baskets filled with fresh baked bread,
A quick slice, to which butter promptly melts
A taste that lemon splashed sparkling water quickly washed away,
Occasionally I’d take notice to the names of guests as they would appear,
On laminated paper, as if anyone could forget who each other were,
I’d Exhale, a simple sigh, as my mother took my tiny hand,
Guiding me away from the feasts and fancy, across the gymnasium floor to our once a year enchanted place, an area more open and clear, where only the two of us would dance and stare,
Still lacquered shiny from the game the night before,
I’d forget about the mud and dirt as that song would play it’s lonesome melody,
And her lips would curl towards the ceiling high, and I’d always wonder why she’d tear
Upon seeing the splendor within my eyes,
But tomorrow the town shall renew once more,
Weekly trips to the fruit stands, riding a bicycle my dad used to own,
Seeing children from the neighborhood, scattered across the grassy groves
Immersed in every type of play imagined, an idea lost with age,
And now, with a moistening of the face, I knew what my mothers’ tears had to say
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