The little boy stood up and dusted the chalk from his knees and wrists and he admired the drawing on the pavement. Chalk dust had smeared and danced in the wind while he looked at his tree and the blue sky behind it. When another boy, a bigger one rode by and let his bicycle tire cut through the center. The boy laughed at the little one and the little one cried.
The boy drew with careful concentration and Crayola crayon gripped tightly in his small hand while he colored in a coloring book to make the unnatural possible. Another girl laughed and tore his page out saying that pigs weren’t blue and grass isn’t orange. Everyone snickered and pointed and the little boy snatched it back and tossed it into his backpack, ashamed.
The teenage boy painted carefully across his canvas and let the blue paint drip like pieces of the sky as he created the ocean waves and swells and his classmates laughed at him because he wanted to paint and not play games and the boy had stopped caring, had stopped hearing the laughter.
The man hung his canvas on the wall of a fine and elegant gallery and people came and stared in awe at his creations and no one laughed or pointed and he didn’t feel ashamed. He only heard praise and now he was laughing.