I met a young man named Lear
Who dragged me around by my ear.
I gave him a clout
Then, with a great shout
I fed him to hungry Miss Rear!
I met a young man named Lear
Who dragged me around by my ear.
I gave him a clout
Then, with a great shout
I fed him to hungry Miss Rear!
I have developed a very great passion
For a young lady who loves fashion.
Her name is Miss Lou
And she wears 1 shoe.
Which she says is the latest fashion!
As someone who is registered blind, I was interested to read this post on Life of a Blind Girl, entitled “As a Disabled person I don’t need fixing”, https://lifeofablindgirl.com/2024/11/17/as-a-disabled-person-i-dont-need-fixing/.
In my case, I was born fully sighted. However, due to a blood clot on the brain I lost the majority of my vision at approximately 18-months-old. As Holly says in her post, disabled people have different experiences of their disability and diverse perspectives as regards whether they wish to be “cured”.
Holly’s article particularly resonated with me as I’ve frequently been asked whether there is a “cure” for my visual impairment. As with Holly, I don’t spend most of my time wishing to be “cured”, I get on with my life.
A couple of weeks ago, I was in a restaurant when the waiter asked me whether I had a “helper”. I do, as it happens, pay someone to clean for me. However, this is down to my dislike of cleaning and the fact that I would rather spend my time (when not working at my day job) socialising with friends, reading and, of course composing poetry! It is not because I am visually impaired.
The waiter was a nice guy and I spent time explaining about my disability, the fact that I have a fulltime job and live alone and am to all intents and purposes independent. He did, I think, get the message as the next time I went into the restaurant he asked whether I had been working.
Were I differ from Holly is in neither being proud or ashamed of being disabled. While Holly states that she is “proud” of her disability, I am neither proud or ashamed. To me being disabled is simply a fact of life along with the fact that I am a poet.
Please do visit the original post which is well worth reading.
Kevin
A crow laughs
As I traverse the lonely path
Of aching lust,
Where autumn leaves turn to dust.
I met a young lady known as Miss Mar
Who was speeding along in her brand new car.
She said, “I’ve left the vicar’s house
As I’m being chased by his spouse!”.
I said, “ah! That’s where you left your bra!”
I met a young lady named Yvette
Who asked me to be her pet.
She said, “join Varnish,
Whose wearing a harness”.
I said, “Yvette! We’ve only just met!”
I leave dry leaves behind.
Yet, I find
Leaves still whisper to me
Of my mortality.
Often they sound the same as rain.
I will return again
For they are part of my heart.
And poetry may live on
When I am gone.
While the rain will remain
I once met a sad old vampire
Who said, “I have lost all desire
To drink men’s blood”.
I said, “that’s good!”.
But I still didn’t trust that vampire!”
I find
Fantasies run riot
In my unquiet mind.
Sometimes in my dreams
It seems
That dark fantasy
Is reality.
But in unending dream
My fantasy
Will be clay.
When I took my Labrador for a walk
We engaged in a jolly good old talk.
I said to him, “Apollo!
Your stomach is too hollow!”,
He said, “pass me that knife and fork!”