Last month my husband Shawn and I turned fifty. A half
century lived and five short years until the AARP mails us our membership cards
and we qualify for the senior dinner special at Golden Corral (not that I would
ever use it). Our youngest child is rapidly approaching seventeen and I can see
the light at the end of the first phase of parenting tunnel. I anticipate more
travel and more time to spend on my writing.
To mark this occasion I decided to write a poem. But not
only that—I wrote it in order to submit it to an online magazine—Quantum Fairy Tales—a speculative
fiction ezine. They had issues a call for short form fiction and poetry and I
had an idea—an image really—that I thought would work. The fact that I had submitted
exactly one story before, a short Christmas story I had written for my kids
about how a sheep dog leads the shepherds to the Christ child which Deseret
Book politely rejected, did not deter me. And whether they accepted it or not,
I am determined to push myself out of my comfort zone as a writer and take more
chances. Which is one of the things this
poem is about.
And guess what? They published it! Please click on Fifty-Fifty
to read the poem. Thank you, Quantum Fairy Tales!
I am a firm believer in readers contributing to a story or
poem. We each bring our own experiences into how we interpret a poem or story. I
feel a creative work exists in the space between the author and the reader, who
each must invest creative energy to bring it to life. That being said, I also enjoy
reading what authors have to say about their creations and about the hows and
whys and whats of the creative process of my favorite authors.
In that spirit, I want to share with you what I had in mind
when I wrote this poem.
As I said before, I had an idea to write a poem for Shawn
and my fiftieth birthdays. I often write poems for significant events or as
gifts for a friend. That is the initial impetus behind this poem—a gift for my husband,
for myself.
Every year I plan a non-birthday adult costume party during
the week leading up to Halloween (and our birthdays). This year the theme was
superheroes. In addition, our family went to Disney World the week of Oct 16
and for the first time were going to go to the Mickey’s Not So Scary Halloween
Party. I had chosen our family costumes—The Incredibles.
You could say I had superheroes on the brain big time.
As I mused on that theme, an image came into focus: two
superheroes—a man and a woman dressed in their super costumes standing on a
precipice, a unruly mob coming up behind them and a choice to make—to jump and
risk a fall or to turn and face certain death. The superheroes were Shawn and
I. The title of the poem refers not only our ages, but also to this choice—this
chance.
The conflict with the mob was real. Only the mob was an
angry teen daughter and her crazy and abusive boyfriend. The cliff was deciding
to send her away—to take a chance, leaping head first into the unknown rather than
facing the certainty of disaster if we did nothing. Maybe just maybe things
would work out. Maybe we could all find the help we needed.
When we went to pick my daughter up from wilderness, we
gathered in a room with the other parents and teens who had finished the program.
We sat in a circle and each teen was given a wooden pendant with a wing burned
into the front.
We were all meant to fly.
Life inevitably brings challenges and hard choices and no
guarantees that things will work out the way we hope. Take a chance anyway.
Fifty-fifty may be as good as the odds may ever get. Take the chance anyway. We
may try and fall flat on our face. Take a chance anyway.
The only real failure is doing nothing; it is not entering
the race, not finishing last. Taking a chance bring something more precious
than victory; it brings experience, compassion, understanding, resolve,
patience, ingenuity, persistence. It is valuable beyond measure. It is the
making of all great men and women.
This poem is about taking those chances. To striving. To
making that leap into the unknown. Join me. We will fly. Even if it is only on the way to the ground.