(40 Lines) When I was seven years old, I had an imaginary friend called Wilbur who taught me all I needed to know about the world and my role in it. Big stuff for a seven year old, if you ask me. Blame Wilbur and his ever-present sage wisdom for filling my young mind with facts. As an adult, of course, I think Wilbur was probably a manifestation of something within me or maybe my way of processing my parent's advice into easily-digestible seven-year-old sound bytes. I don't know, I've never studied child psychology or anything that might give me a clue as to who Wilbur was. I'm a writer, not a whatever those people are called who study kids. But my point isn't kids. My point is Wilbur, more specifically the time that Wilbur told me to be careful on my bike when I was riding too close to the cliff's edge on that sunny summer day. I should have listened, but I was too high on July and sugar to pay attention to anything Wilbur had to say. (This was 1997, so I'm sure there was some sneaky Surge involved in the decision — I looked up Surge on Wikipedia just now, that mythical forbidden beverage of our childhood, and I found out you can still buy it in Norway. Cue mass millennial exodus to Oslo on the next flight out.) And since I was too busy believing I knew Everything There Is To Know About The World, I didn't listen to Wilbur as I got close, too close, to that cliff's edge. The sun beat down as I went up, up, over, and landed with a crash in a patch of poison ivy. One broken arm and a bottle of calamine lotion later (acrid-smelling pink goo in a blandly medicinal bottle that I still remember my mother smearing across the left side of my body), I learned to listen to Wilbur. |