The Size of Spokane
April 21, 2009 by Marj Wyatt
Filed under Marj Wyatt's Musings
This post is not about business or marketing in any sense other than we have to pursue our passions to live our life dreams. Sometimes, we are so caught up in our material pursuits, we do not take the time to pause and consider what we may be missing by choosing to not be aware of what is beautiful in our midst.
This poem arrived in an email subscription from The Writer’s Almanac years ago. I have never forgotten how this profound poem affected me when I first read it and have since shared it with many of my friends and colleagues.
WEDNESDAY, 10 SEPTEMBER, 2003
Poem: “The Size of Spokane,” by Heather McHugh, from Hinge and Sign (Wesleyan University Press).
The Size of Spokane
The baby isn’t cute.
In fact he’s a homely little pale and headlong stumbler.
Still, he’s one of us-the human beings stuck on flight 295 (Chicago to Spokane);
and when he passes my seat twice at full tilt this then that direction,
I look down from Lethal Weapon 3 to see just why.
He’s running back and forth across a sunblazed circle on the carpet-something brilliant,
fallen from a porthole.
So! it’s light amazing him, it’s only light,
despite some three and one half hundred people, propped in rows for him to wonder at;
it’s light he can’t get over, light he can’t investigate enough, however many zones he runs across it, flickering himself.
The umpteenth time I see him coming,
I’ve had just about enough;
but then he notices me noticing and stops-one fat hand on my armrest-to inspect the oddities of me.
****
Some people cannot hear.
Some people cannot walk.
But everyone was sunstruck once, and set adrift.
Have we forgotten how astonishing this is?
so practiced all our senses we cannot imagine them?
foreseen instead of seeing all the all there is?
Each spectral port, each human eye is shot through with a hole,
and everything we know goes in there, where it feeds a blaze.
In a flash the baby’s old;
Mel Gibson’s hundredth comeback seems less clever;
all his chases and embraces narrow down, while we fly on (in our plain radiance of vehicle)
toward what cannot stay small forever.
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Marj,
Now that is a great way of saying Stop and Take Time to Smell the Roses!
Marj,
Thanks for the reminder. We miss so much every day. This is an amazing world God has created for us. Time to enjoy it!!
I loved reading this. I can just imagine that little boy and his wonder at the light.
Thanks for sharing Marj.
Yeah, I forgot about poetry there for a minute. Those flashes of insight revealed in someting closer to one’s own language prove that we can understand each other no matter the seeming infinity of our distance.
I liked it too because I hold onto what I consider the first conscious thought that I can remember. It too was light. I was on our thin carpeted den floor and looked up to the ceiling to see it. light shimmered there but where did it come from? I immediately realized it was reflected off the water in the blue kiddie pool in the back yard. What seemed akin to something as fantastic as a ghost was revealed to be light; yet, that light is as awe inducing as any mystery if we but “look” for it.
Also, your post reminds me that as long as we give credit where it is due pointing to great work that unlocked our understanding is as worthwhile as writing a book.