The Day I Unplugged

I looked and saw that the wrong things were beloved
and stood up to say so, and to point and say:
love this instead.  

I stood up to point and say
this, here, is more worthy of your love,
and these other things should be burned.

Others stood about and shouted
and pointed, some at the things I loved,
some at that which I decried, and they proclaimed

that their choices were more worthy,
that my choices were aligned well with theirs,
or that my choices were those of the insane and evil.

Seeing us all pointing and shouting, all at different things,
all at things we liked or disliked, some of us using both hands
to praise and condemn at once, I became weary of it all

and dropped my arms and my choosing. Very well, I said,
I shall have none, shall love none, shall loathe none.
Good bye, I said, to all of this and to all my former fellows,

fare better or worse as you choose.  I turned from it
and moved, really, for the first time in a long time, 
to the blankest spot in the blankest part of the country

and looked at nothing and chose nothing to like or dislike.
I think I remember this, I said; this is the place
of making it up.  Of simply being there.

Of relearning how to look at things, how to see purely 
what is and is not for each.  The place to find knowledge
and never feel a need to found a school.

 

About Tony Brown

Unknown's avatar
A poet with a history in slam, lots of publications; my personal poetry and a little bit of daily life and opinions. Read the page called "About..." for the details. View all posts by Tony Brown

2 responses to “The Day I Unplugged

Leave a reply to Tony Brown Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.