Breakfast-time poem on self-expression, personal happiness, and cultural acceptance. |
You Make Me Wear Clothes Wandering adventure, life peeks out of holes, around the corner, sneaking up behind me, saying, "Boo!" Awaiting me, so patiently, with curtain back, you catch me running naked in the fields, the sparrows startled by my shouts of glee. "Whoopee!" I say... The sunny clouds of airy matter fill my cotton-pickin' head. No jeans, no overalls, no buckles, clasps, or binders poke my sides or hold me down. "Whoopee!" I run through stalks of corn, a corny-smelling green theater, movie reel of Orville Wright and Wilbur flying overhead. I wave my hand, my skin obscured by husks that cover eyes and ears -- they hear no sound of me -- "Whoopee!" I shout, but there you are, a tiny speck on my horizon, wearing red. You're on the porch, you're coming down. I hear you calling, "Karen! Karen! Come on in!" I stop the sprint and hang my head. I know it's time to settle down and be polite with parlor tricks that move the masses, idly talking words of action as we shake their hands and smile -- I guess it's not so bad. The worst would have to be the clothes you make me wear so I can hold my secrets in. I must wear clothes... |