I am 10 years old. I sit at my small wooden desk that nestles under my bedroom window.

It is chunky, but solidly built, a bright lemon yellow color. My mother painted it for me.

Two drawers that pull out smoothly and one at the bottom that is deep. That’s where my really secret stuff will go.

There is a matching wooden chair that fits my bottom perfectly and nests underneath the lip of the long top drawer at my chest level.

The creamy finish is smooth – that cheery, shiny yellow motif of the smiley-face 1970s, and my mommy got it just right. It matches my smiley-face bank and the smiley-face patch sewed on the back pocket of my favorite jeans.

I love the desk to be neat, with pens and pencils lined up in the drawer and lined notebook paper tucked inside it, along with my Holly Hobby diary.

And even a box of wax seals, lined up like sticky gummy candies. They wait for my note with a fancy handle with a stamp that makes a smiley-face design.

I rest my elbows on the sturdy wooden top and stare out the window.

My babysitter Sarah lives next door and her bedroom window desk also looks directly at mine.

Sometimes at night I wait until dark, when I can see her light come on. Her room is wrapped in a gauze of purple, I can just make out her slim body moving around her room.

I want her to stop and sit down and look over at me. She is so beautiful.

I love writing letters more than anything. I write my mom and my dad and my grandparents. I leave notes everywhere – on pillows, under doors.

When I sit at the bright yellow desk there is order and completeness and clean possibility. Optimism. Even greatness!

I am yellow, like joy, like a daffodil. I want my words to fly like the pollen that is deep inside the blossom, just waiting for a breeze to whisk them into the sky. Just like that – easy – I want my words to make me a famous author.

I want my words to fly like pollen …

So I wrote that memory a long time ago, and unearthed it from boxes in the attic in a recent pandemic cleaning frenzy.

What stands out so brightly to me now is not the desk. It is this: my mother.

My mother gifting me the perfect thing, the desk. She saw how I loved to spy on people and scribble in my journal and pretend to be a journalist.

I don’t have many memories of my mom slowing down to sit with me, to just be, to simply listen. She was an ADD type and I learned early on that her focus was generally elsewhere.

But it is only now that I can fully appreciate that Mom really did see me, in her way. She saw the yellow in me.

And maybe it’s not too late to savor the tiny grain, the intention. I think of the yellow desk and how she did love me.

How much of our childhood is essentially a grasp for attention. It’s as profound, yet as simple as that. We aren’t grabbing for a thing, a gift, or any object at all. It’s a craving to be the center of the gaze.

We long for someone to look us full-on in our little faces, to stop the grown-up world for just a moment, because nothing eclipses this love.

Listen to me. I am important, I have something to say.

It sounds tiny, but when you experience it, you know it. Time slows down. There is a texture.

It is the thing that you will remember. Like the wax to the seal, the moment imprints on your heart.

This is what I mean about moments. My chicken moments.

Looking deeply at a thing. Listening, absorbing the gaze, or gazing deeply at someone else.

Anyway, this morning I watch the buttery yellow pullets make a run for the yard after the nighttime roost in the coop. I love their happy clucks and chortles of surprise, like its a brand new world out here.

They seem to forget that they know this place – and what happened yesterday. I wonder if they have a memory.

I wonder if they dream?

Maybe they dream of a long ago forest, and of an ancient time when they were free to hunt and scurry and lay eggs. When they would plump down underneath mother’s thick breast into soft grasses, when darkness covered the deep thickets at dusk. When they were vulnerable but still safe from predators.

I wonder if they dream of what it felt like to be wild.

Wild thoughts, memories, chicken dreams.

2 thoughts on “chicken dreams

  1. Love this. I still remember the few times when I was a child and a random adult stopped to talk to me…to me…with me…not as an adult to child but as a person to person. Sweet wonderful memories to be savored. I always try to talk to a child as a whole person but sometimes I am rushed or bothered by something else and I fail. This has reminded me to do better. Oh,and as a neuroradiologist, I feel certain that all animals have memories and feelings. Their brains are not so different from ours😍

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  2. So lovely Beth – Thank you for sharing this memory – you paint the picture so beautifully with your words not only can I see your lovely images – I have a few memories that are significant like this one – however I always see the memories like I see without my glasses now – which makes me think maybe my eyesight was not so good from the beginning 😉
    Cheers, and stay safe! Mary

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