Photography And Half-Thoughts By Mitchell Hegman

...because some of it is pretty and some of it is not.

Sunday, November 12, 2017

Xylophobia

For devout Christians, as proclaimed in Proverbs, “fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.”  For a bumbling troll like me, misspelling the word xylophone is also a pretty good start.
When I threw myself at the internet to check out “xylophone” the other day, I discovered “xylophobia” and, in the process, learned something.
Xylophobia is, by definition, “the irrational fear of wooden objects or forests.”
“Irrational” is the tricky part here.
Maybe fearing a child’s wooden rocking horse or a highly polished mahogany salad bowl is somewhere in the range of irrational, but I think the haunted forest in the Wizard of Oz was pretty darned scare-worthy.  I would place a “rational” sticker on fearing that.   I am also not crazy about wooden marionettes.  I especially dislike dancing skeletons because—you know what?—they are skeletons and they are dancing.
That just ain’t natural!
As I sit here thinking about this, I am also afraid of a certain kind of stick.  I discovered one of these sticks in a pine forest many years ago when, for reasons not clear to me now, I and my friend, Mark, engaged in a stick-throwing war.  Clearly, we should have better defined the size of sticks allowed for throwing long before our first (and last) battle.  I really wish I could tell you that I “was just a dumb kid” and didn’t know better, but I was nineteen or twenty at the time.
For a while we had big fun.  We flung sticks at the trees behind which each of us stood in tight profile, hiding.  Some sticks cracked solid against our trees, shattering into a spray of splinters.  Hooray for that!  Some sticks whoof-whoofed past our protective trees, end-over-end, and fomped harmlessly against the understory at some distance beyond.
I discovered the sort of stick that scares me when I decided to peek out from behind my tree and see if Mark had slipped behind a new tree.  The sort of stick I am talking about is about eighteen inches long, a bit under two inches in diameter, and it is three feet from your face—streaking at you—when you poke your head out from behind a tree.
The stick caught me square in the forehead, end first.  I don’t recall any particular sound upon impact.  I simply recall gasping before I fell into an enormous black void.
Mark was very excited when I fluttered back up into the light from the void.  “You broke the stick with your head, Kidd!” he exclaimed.  He held the stick before me.  He may even have been a little concerned for my welfare.  “But you have a cut on your forehead.”
Sure enough, I was bleeding.  I had broken the stick.  My head thumped with pain.  In a normal setting I likely would have gone to the emergency room for stitches, but we were hours from town.
Here we are, all these years later, and I still have that damned stick.  I carried it out with me that day.  Today, you can find it at the bottom of a dresser drawer in what was once my daughter’s bedroom.  I keep it as a good reminder of something…I just can’t remember what.      

-- Mitchell Hegman

2 comments:

  1. I think it is a reminder of a precious fun and carefree time in your life -- your boyhood.

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