Friday, May 22, 2009

Stardust and Fairy Dust




Last night I dreamed that the vintage clothing spots in Kansas City had dried up. The stores had closed, or didn’t carry vintage anymore. I searched through various rooms, dismayed at the empty racks. Then I thought----“Oh that’s right. All the good stuff is in the basement.” But when I went down there, the hangars were bare. One of the shops was called The Black Rose. Knowing it had closed upset me. But then, I remembered Lawrence. A college town full of artsy types who would keep vintage stores in business. “I can go to Lawrence,” I thought. “Yes, Lawrence. That’s not too far.” I was so relieved.

Coming back from lunch yesterday, I drove past one of those big corporate lawns outside an office building. I saw two small clusters of people on the grass. A man was trying to walk from one group to the other carrying a spoon full of water. Oh Lord, I thought. Is that a team-building exercise?

I feel magical today. I am bespeckled with purple fairy dust. It’s in my fingernails and under my skin. I sprinkled purple glitter onto Lilah’s fairy wings, and sprayed her hair purple, to get her ready for her play. I was practically gassing her. Colored hair spray is toxic and nasty. Lilah made a graceful entrance, spinning onstage in her purple dress and silver slippers. She waved her wand and tantalized Pinocchio with the prospect of being a real boy. But first he had to meet her stringent requirements: be honest, respect and obey his father, and go to school. That’s a school play for you, always slipping in a plug for THE MACHINE.

Someone told me today that when her son was little she sang him the song "Woodstock" by Joni Mitchell to help him go to sleep. She sang:

By the time we got to woodstock
We were half a million strong
And everywhere there was song and celebration
And I dreamed I saw the bombers
Riding shotgun in the sky
And they were turning into butterflies
Above our nation

We are stardust
We are golden
We are billion year old carbon
And we got to get ourselves
Back to the garden

He's grown now, but not long ago he asked her to sing "the song about the planes turning into butterflies".

4 comments:

  1. That's right, we folks here in Larryville will keep the vintage shops open for you, even after KC loses its soul.

    Hmmm...team building exercises with a spoon. I don't like the sound of it. Not at all.

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  2. Is that M and A's story?
    I hope your dream doesn't come true.
    Me like the pic.
    Oh yeah, Marc reminded me--team building with a spoon--hilarious!
    My leg is broken in the wilderness and I'm dying of thirst. Can I depend on Jeffery from Communications to find a water source? Will he make it back without spilling the precious life elixir from the plastic spoon? Why, oh, why didn't I bring a styrofoam cup?
    Lame, but I'm leaving it....

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  3. I'm cracking up over your "team building exericise" bit.

    Yes, it's M and A's story. Who else but M would sing Woodstock as a lullably? It's awesome -- I love it. I wish I had sung that to my kids. Too late --singing it now would just elicit groans and rolling eyeballs.

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  4. For real about M. I'm going to add that to my lullaby list created by my mom.
    Good Night and Golden Slumbers are on there.

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