I have always had a sort of
fascination with the story of Peter Pan. There are many reasons: pirates,
fairies, flying, imagination, swordplay, and eternal youth. Perhaps it is that
last one that stirs me the most. I always loved the idea of escaping to a
magical land where one could stay young forever.
It is not just a fear of growing up
that drives this fascination, though I am afraid. I’m afraid of the
responsibilities, the heartaches, and the change. But more than the fear of
moving forward, I am grieved by the loss of what has past. We can never go back
to our youthful carefree days, and I feel a great sense of loss. I will never
curl up on my mother’s lap entrenched in her arms being rocked back and forth
with the beating of her heart loud in my ear. I will never go tromping through
the woods fighting off invisible ninjas or slashing down weeds with wooden
swords. I will never swim beside my brother in the ocean as our super hero
selves, Crayola and Crayon, punching waves in the face and saving all those who
lie sleeping on the sand. I won’t play beanie babies on the school bus, or
catch touchdown passes in laced socks and Mary-Janes.
The innocence, the confidence, the
idea that I could do anything, be anything, those feelings are gone. Maybe
dulled is more fair a term. But at any rate, I miss it. I miss the freedom and
the simplicity of that life. Grown up life seems so complicated. Consequences
are more severe, relationships more demanding, and pain more acutely felt.
Could we only go back once in a while and feel the sensation? Wouldn’t it be
wonderful?
“On these magic shores children at play are
forever beaching their coracles. We too have been there; we can still hear the
sound of the surf, though we shall land no more.”
― J.M. Barrie, Peter Pan
― J.M. Barrie, Peter Pan
Starcatchers
Wake up you starcatchers,
You early morning dreamers,You freckle faced raggedy gingers.
Pick up your pixie dust!
Today is for tasting cirrus vapors
Not for sinking your toes into the black soil of the earth
Where calluses serve as a symbol of toil
Rather than the freedom of Neverland days.
This dawn, we skate the horizon
To a place where swords and cannons are overtaken by daggers and
pebbles,
Where the lips of orphans are not parched or cracked or bleeding.
For there, children clap for the salvation of fallen fairies,
Kites bear the weight of imaginative adolescent girls,
And ticking clocks mark the passage of crocodiles
Not of time.
Neverland does not mourn the living
Like barren winter trees still green with wick.
For there, we do not have seasons that pass,
But one infinite moment in which
Boys conquer men.
Ride with me
To where dreams are never too lofty,
Because where we go
We walk in the clouds
Weightless and unhindered by limits,
Or practicalities, or bedtimes.
No no!
We will glide on in endless story.
Follow me in youthful exodus
Out of the bondage of sheets, duvets and feather pillows.
Out the open window,
The gateway to possibility.
Do not stay behind as your fathers
Or their fathers before them.
Let this be the ageless generation!
-Elisa Parmer
-Elisa Parmer
No comments:
Post a Comment