In Preparation for Our Landing
he’s reading and munching on peanuts
and Cheetos, thinking about what he
wants to be when he grows up, eventhough he knows he’s already grown up,
when he realizes he already is what he
wants to be when he grows up, that it
never has been about yearning and
desire and wanting but being, simply. The
pilot turns on the fasten seatbelt sign.
To teach the child, the man
skips a stone across the pond;
the light splashes propel eachflying motion onward, until
without notice or warning or
even a casual glance backward
it sinks.
In perfect imitation, the child
throws another stone,
splashing the noonday sun
reflecting the liquid glass that
the flying stone, in one final
burst of movement, still cannot
shatter.
Photographs: "Blues" and "Rock and Stream" by Nancy Rosback. Used with permission.
Dude. Awesome. :) I hope you appreciate the limited adolescent vocabulary.
ReplyDeleteWear a helmet with that seat belt. Life gets exciting at this chiastic junction of 'simply being'.
ReplyDeleteIf only men and boys would skip rocks more. Together.
Been missin' you my friend~loved the poetry doodles on this page.
i love all of this post.
ReplyDeletethough, i must say, the first poem speaks volumes to me right now.
(p.s. good one, on using the word cheetos)
Nice.Love 'em both, but Skipping Stones especially. To describe something as fleeting as a skipping stone, that is a fine thing. Well done.
ReplyDeleteGreat capture of that moment of knowing we already are who we thought we would be and yet still so far...
ReplyDeleteI continue to be blessed by your words
I love the second poem. So much. :)
ReplyDeleteThe second poem speaks volumes about parent/child relations.
ReplyDeleteLove it!
Ah, to figure out that whole "being" thing at a young age!
ReplyDeleteLoved both of these, Glynn.
The first one actually echo's a conversation my wife and I had the other day. It was a serious conversation about what we wanted to be when we grew up.
ReplyDeleteI like these. I could say more, but want to leave you just with that sense... I like these...
ReplyDeleteThis is good stuff Glynn.
ReplyDeleteI'm going to echo Nancy. The first poem just spoke right to my heart. I love them both, but that's the one!
ReplyDelete