The world is full of magic things,
patiently waiting for our senses to grow sharper.”
― W.B. Yeats
As I grew up, I took better notice of the world around me. That kept me alive more than once, when looking away might have meant my day ending in an explosion of surprised pain. I might not be the youngest or the most fit in the group, but when need be, I can fire out of a dangerous place as if stuffed with powder, or fight back. It's perception, it's nothing more than awareness of things around you, when to take cover and when to take flight. You learn through time, or by staring at your reflection in the weapon of your own destruction. I see the little things, I'm trained to, yes, but I try and look past the obvious into the shadows.
It's not just situations, it's not just people, it's words. Politics will teach us, if anything, that words are just that, words, and without any sort of commitment to their substantiation, they mean nothing. Words not just spoken, but crafted and spun and spun yet again until they are as lightweight and meaningless as brittle thread.
Simple words, but words that bear power. Remember the big fuss when Crayola had to get rid of the crayons we all colored with for generations, one called "Flesh" because it was a light shade, the color of Caucasian skin. Like "Indian Red" it was soon sent to the bin of obsolete colors. Flesh, certainly, is every hue and shade, but what the word brings back is whatever you bring to it, that small exposed place on the inside of the wrist just below a cuff of blue shirt, the shadow there beneath the nape of the neck, where the hair is as soft as down underneath your lips as you slip down into colorless dark.
Indian Red. For me that does not bring to mind a Native American, but the fire, the variated sky of the desert, the hues of life and death. It is the color of nature's power and the deceit of man's ego, which not only rises but sometimes sets, on crimson holes in a ravaged shirt, that bloomed like sudden flowers in the darkness. It is the color of muddy, bloodied ground, from which the soul strives to leave before being pulled beneath it forever. It is the color of a sunrise in your lovers eyes, the light of hope and given promise.
Words, just words, that bring to them meaning which is yours alone.
A person is more than their words, and more than their form. As a woman, not just a mother, I hate to see the images being given to our daughters, in word, in pictures, as to what is "beautiful".
I was at a grocers in a very upscale neighborhood (you know those places where they don't yield on roundabouts to the car in the circle but rather, who has the more expensive SUV). I was in line behind a woman in her 30's, with a figure some many would think was ideal, but to me, resembled a bag of antlers wearing Armani. She was buying nothing but a week's worth of Diet Coke, Diet Jello, Cremora, coffee, lots of bagged and chopped iceberg lettuce and a can or two of what was either cat food or tuna. I looked at her and couldn't help but think "you poor thing, can I introduce you to cheese?" She looked disdainfully at me and my bacon and steak, bag of oranges, honey, oatmeal and veggies in their natural state, and probably resisted the urge to moo.
How did we reach such a place where what is considered beautiful or desirable is defined by a magazine? You must be this thin, you must be this age, this shape; you must be this tall to ride the ride. And I watch, we watch, as a nation of daughters starve themselves into an image that was never their perception of beauty, only their perception of belonging. Men can be no different, for that pain of unrealistic expectations knows no gender.
It's a sad world indeed, when we care more about how someone looks than what they can create. When one's worth is based upon what they can give us in our lacking, not what they are. But we are the population that, for the most part, would rather watch the talentless of reality TV than pick up a book written two hundred years ago that is still sold today. Who among them, has ever experienced sitting in quiet with such a book, as words come swift and secret in the night, dressed in garments of longing and lust and greed and triumph, the likes of which no episode of reality TV would even scratch the surface of.
It's perception. It's how you look at the world and how much of the world out there, hidden away from prying eyes, you take the time to really look at.
Two different people looking at the same thing will never see it the same way. Some people would look at a small safe in which lie several new and historical firearms and simply see "gun nut!" (often muttered with the same tone as "shark!"). Others would see money that could have been given to others, as how selfish to actually wish to enjoy the fruits of my years of hard work. Others will see what I do, tools of value and defense, of which I am the custodian of their careful use, just as I am the custodian of the world I carry around inside me.
I finish up preparing for my day, gathering up notes on what has been torn apart, and set them under a stone. It's a rough piece of rock, that when cut in half, would reveal the most incredible colors. Look closely, look deeply. There's a dark purple so rare, that for a commoner in ancient times to don it, would be on pain of death. There's startled jays of blue, soft pinks and whites that flower from within, the color of flesh, dripping from limbs like paint, forbidden fruits, their taste only a memory as you trace the emotion of those hues with the tip of a finger
To some, this would simply be a "rock", never turned over, not examined closely, never revealing that beauty that emerges when it has been cut. To not see that, to not know that, will be their loss.
I turn the desk light off, as the morning sun vanquishes the darkness, wondering too, if these words will be just words, spun off into the dark. But it's enough to know, that, which I've learned through the years, that seeing and hearing are both blind and deaf, but the well worn heart can see that which is absolute magic.
- Brigid