Saturday 7 April 2012

How to Help a Small Hope Grow

Hello. On and off again over the last three or so days I've been writing a thing. The following is it:


How to Help a Small Hope Grow


                Not too far from the nearest, joy-filled group of people, there is a shadowy dell, or perhaps the right word is depression. Looking at it from the outside it doesn’t seem particularly deep nor its sides all that steep, but if one were to find oneself at its bottom there would be a certain difficulty in escaping. Perspective is a strange thing: from a slight distance outside one would think it a pleasant enough spot in which to enjoy a few beers and some intelligent chat with friends, even though it’s a tad removed from the beauty of full sunshine or the excitement of the unrestricted gale. But if one takes the time to peer in tentatively, we find ourselves looking down on a fetid quagmire that traps the feet of the playful hopes that unwittingly built their nest on the side of the depression, so near as to be almost unavoidable.
                Hopes are a strange and wonderful species of creature. They have soft coats of varying hues; some are a clean white which might hurt the eyes, some are deepest red, some blue, some green some black but all are pleasing to the eye if seen if seen in the right light. Their eyes are large and darting, full of unfocussed curiosity as they look for new meadows in which to frolic. Their soft feet are unsure when young but as they mature grow into an agility that lets them mount all but the sheerest of obstacles.
                Look! Timidly emerging from its nest is a newborn with fur like a blushing poppy. Its long-lashed eyes shyly search its surrounds for another being with whom it might forge a connection and then perhaps a friendship. It sees the grasping, sodden bog and sags in resignation. It knows it is not strong enough to leap that loathsome dell. It mews softly. It mews its cry of desperation, unable to make the leap itself, needing another, an outsider, there to help it jump but it’s afraid of being scorned by whomever hears and thrown off balance to into the depression to feed it with its death.
                A short distance away, but close enough to be just visible over the lip of the depression from the low, lowly vantage point of a young, helpless hope, there was the top of a brown-haired head. The hair was just light enough so as not to be black and in this light had two locks crossing at right angles in the wind that verged on red. That red cross was aid and salvation to the poor hope, and it mewed slightly louder and longer than before: a salutation, a call to parlay.
                The newborn immediately regretted its rash action. The owner of that hair would not want to be bothered by a thing as weak and pathetic as itself, there were far better things to do with one’s time than help a pink weasel out of a puddle. The hair probably hadn’t even heard the tiny wretched cry. It was probably better this way. Everyone know proper young hopes should be able to solve their own problems, and if this struggling, scared little one couldn’t then it probably wasn’t trying hard enough; bigger problems than a dell get overcome every minute of the day. The hope sagged again.
                But wait! The head has stopped! And now it is moving closer, revealing eyes, a nose, and a concerned but caring frown. It is the head of a young woman in navy blue. The little hope’s heart soared at the thought of someone else taking time out of their day to engage with it. Light sometimes plays tricks with your eyes, but if you had seen this moment of uplift you would have thought the fuzz-covered hope had grown a little larger. The young woman reached the edge of the depression, saw the tiny hope on the far side of it and her concern changed to determination. She reached into a pocket and pulled out a seed. You might think this seed to be a little thing, not worth anything to anyone, but you’d be wrong. It contained the hope’s salvation.
                She stuck the seed into the ground with a decisive thrust of a finger. The hope, definitely bigger now, looked on in anxiety and anticipation. There was a pause. The simple gesture had no discernible effect at first. But then a lone shoot emerged from the soil. It swayed, its tip barely an inch from the loam that had bore it. It swayed, its tip barely three inches from the loam that had bore it, then six, then a foot, then more. Much thicker than it had been, the shoot’s weight bent it down towards the depression and the hope waiting for an escape within it. The hope, itself larger and more sure-footed, stepped onto the vine the moment it touched the earth near the nest. Though shaky, the plant proved a perfectly adequate path for the hope’s egress. A fond, quick lick of the hand was all the thanks the hope knew how to give, but it was accepted by she who watched it with a warm grin as it scampered off to find food and grow into a full-fledged reality.
                The young woman, or others of a similarly caring disposition, regularly comes to the plant to check it’s still there to serve as a highway for hopes. They tend it with genuine concern and chase away the sharp-toothed doubts – vicious, buzzing creatures that seek to gnaw through the plant and leave the hopes once again stranded in the depression. This is a continual task, and not always properly rewarded, but it is thanks to considerate people like this that the hopes which emerge, unsure and barely-formed, can have a chance at growing up and loving life.
                I for one would like to thank them.

   One hopes you're well,
      Yrs,
         ADWoodward

1 comment:

  1. This genuinely made me cry. Sorry if that's a bit pathetic, but it's the truth. Phoebe would have loved it.

    Treacle

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