With Debbie Chilton

Author and Poet

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Reality Shopping

Our Preconceptions 




A Child . . .
Curious with wonder
knows this person is different
but he is not afraid
he lingers . . .
and reaches forward
as if he needs to know who this person is

The Mother . . .
A look of embarrassment on her face
pulling the child away
lifting the child up turns away
making their escape

The child . . .
Continues to reach towards
to the person that is different . . .
            he is curious that is all! 

The Woman in the wheelchair. . .
Sits in her wheelchair drooling
              Shifting uncomfortably trying to smile.

The child . . .
              Smiles back
              and laughs

The mother . . .
              Snatches him away.

The woman in the wheelchair . . .
              Wonders if this is how attitudes are formed

The checkout chick . . .
              It’s been a long day
              her feet hurt
              her mind is on picking up the kids
              cooking dinner
              Sam’s soccer practice
              she mumbles ‘How are you?’
              failing to make eye contact

The woman in the wheelchair . . .
              Fine
              she is annoyed as she fumbles through her purse

The checkout chick. . .
              Looks impatient
              tapping on the counter
              looking at the growing queue
              as she takes the money

Other customers . . .
             Smile
             the lady behind the woman tells her not to rush
             gentleman at the back changes queues
             others shift on their feet

The checkout chick . . .
            Almost throws four full bags
            at the woman
have a nice day
no eye contact again
begins scanning the next ladies items
"How are you today?"
            not that she cares

Teenagers at the taxi rank . . .  
            Hair hangs over their faces
            laughing
            nudging each other
            chewing on gum
            "What you looking at?"

The woman in the wheelchair . . .
            Looks away
            she knows she was staring
            it is her turn to feel embarrassed
            she feels ashamed
            she is also nervous
            there’s a group of them
            and one of her

Teenagers at the taxi rank . . .
            Laugh louder
            two eyeball each other
            one spits on the ground
            they all laugh
            another spits out his gum
            "Hey spastic you got a smoke?"
            more laughter

The woman in the wheelchair  . . .
            Tries to slide down in her chair
            she tucks her head into her collar
            hoping the grow bored and go away

Teenagers at the taxi rank . . .
            see her cowering
            they laugh
            they know they have a game on their hands
The woman in the wheelchair . . .
            Relieved
            her taxi has just pulled up

Taxi driver . . .
            Looks at his watch
            its almost knock off time
            on a Friday afternoon
            he’s going to the game tonight
            getting home is all he thinks about
            as he lowers the lift

The woman in the wheelchair . . .
Wheels onto the lift
she clutches on while she is raised
then wheels into the van

Taxi diver . . .
            Grunts instructions
            forwards
            back . . . back
            woo . . . woo . . . woo!
            he throws straps everywhere
            impatient
he is thinking of getting to the game on time
he is aware the clock is ticking
he jumps off the ramp
to fold it away

The woman in the wheelchair and the taxi driver . . .
            Do not speak during the journey
            she is exhausted
            he needs to get to the game on time
            both are relieved when she pays her fare

The woman in the wheelchair . . .
            Yawns
            she feels disheartened
            placing the shopping in the kitchen
            her mind searches for understanding
            then she smiles
            she has remembered the child
            and the patient lady behind her at the checkout
            suddenly the world seems a better place.

Debbie Chilton (c) Copyright, 2010
All Rights Reserved

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