Monday, April 29, 2013

Red Shoes

I wrote this poem in 2010 for inclusion in Annell Livingston's "The Red Shoes Artists Book Project" 


Red Shoes

 

she was too young

for those shoes

not a woman

still a child

what was he thinking


she was innocent

those shoes

screamed 'easy'


slip them on

lace them up

what was he thinking


she was not ready

daddy’s little girl

too much too soon


red shoes tarnished her soul

what was he thinking











23 comments:

  1. What was he thinking,
    indeed?

    And what is it
    with red shoes?

    Truly iconic?
    Lively?
    Fun?
    Seductive?
    All
    of the
    above?

    Blessings and Bear hugs!
    Bears Noting
    Life in the Urban Forest (my poetry blog)

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  2. The parental dilemma - gifting a child with her heart's desire, at the same time worrying about her safety out in the world. Well captured.

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  3. Dare I ask if the young lady is wearing anything other than shoes?

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  4. ugh...rather heart breaking when kids assume roles...or are forced to take on roles far beyond where they need to be

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  5. A suprise isn't it Helen? The color red catches one's attention and is supposed to carry a message. I am not sure what the message is. There is a movie and a Broadway play titled "THE RED SHOES." The movies was a hit, the play folded after five performances.

    BTW, my kiddie filter gave me fits here. XD
    ..

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    Replies
    1. I really like your bionic horse team in your header picture. I saw it last week and tried to figure out the mechanics of it.
      ..

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  6. ...Oh, my 10 year old loves trying on her older sisters shoes... How they so want to grow up - I'm in no hurry. I think this poem is so powerful, Helen!

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  7. You certainly cut to the heart of this picture.

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  8. When I was maybe 32, I had a wonderful pair of red shoes, or so I thought. My friend's teenage daughter called them "Kay's hooker shoes" and I never wore them again, but she kept talking about them for years. Probably still would if I say "red shoes" next time I see her. Maybe I'll get red running shoes.
    "Little red running shoes
    where have you been?
    over to Grandma's to meet the bad wolf."
    K

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  9. They do scream "easy"!! I was floored for a second, thought the G-Man came back to life. Funny, I had just referenced him in my boomerang post a couple of weeks ago. Like minds.....

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  10. He was certainly one of a kind! Loved him, his sense of humour.

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  11. What was SHE thinking? Try wearing a pretty red
    dress to a party and see if it does magic?
    ..

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  12. A chilling reminder of things we'd rather not confront. And I think that picture has a 'bondage' look about it too, reinforcing the message of powerlessness despite the false veneer of sophistication.

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    1. I recall trying to post my poem on FB, it wasn't allowed due to the image. I do understand why and you are right about 'the things we would rather not confront, Rosemary. What the poem was all about. Too old too soon.

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  13. Red can be empowering as well as viciously glaring. It makes a statement though.

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  14. (that was I, Priscilla King; Google is misbehaving)

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  15. Now I want to know what he was thinking. I will never know (I suspect).

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  16. My first favorite pair of shoes were red. My dad got them for me with a red dress. I was eleven. And would've worn the outfit for a whole weekend, if my mother would've cried bloody murder. There is something powerful about red... ❤️

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I appreciate each of you and the comments you leave ~~ thanks so much.