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
I think it is a reminder of a precious fun and carefree time in your life -- your boyhood.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely brings back memories!
ReplyDelete