This tale is mine and true. It tells Of how I learned to fly, soaring high Above anxiety and fear and pain. I Was born on the ground, in a Tumultuous storm of sorrow and confusion, No wings to be found. As a child, I Watched birds claim the sky from behind the Glass of my bedroom window. They were masters Of flight and freedom alike, and I wondered How it would feel to be the same. I met the king Of beasts, surprisingly gentle and genial, When I wandered too near my neighbour’s fields. He huffed out a curious breath and lowered His nose to my palm. I stood stock-still in Awe, until the beast thundered back across the grass to his Herd. I went home, enthralled and excited, and Learned all I could about him. Within a Month, I was atop a similar beast with a thick grey mane And a sun-dappled pelt. It was a slow, cautious Thing, but I was closer to the heavens than I had ever been. And then we were trotting. Sometimes, when the sun-dappled Beast was feeling especially joyful, He bounced me up high from my seat. I became a few inches closer to flight. The First time we sailed over a jump, there was a Moment—a single ephemeral eternity—where All four of the beast’s hooves left the ground And we were soaring forward and I was weightless, And in that moment, I realised that I don’t need Wings to fly. Elutheria: Greek personification of liberty and freedom |