I remember my dreams of a holy place, a library where I ran, just a little boy with other boys, with a great stained glass window filling up the space on the pointed ceiling above the sacred text that left me perplexed and mouthing a few syllables when I could understand, and wishing to feel the soft cloth on my head, over a short haircut that I didn't have.
I can't truly say if it was a dream, but I remember walking outside into the desert with those little boys, feeling jealous of their kippahs, and eventually we stopped at what I thought might be like a stream, but was only a canal in the wasteland. The tumbleweeds whispered and rattled, but no snakes slid out of them with a tail that rattled quite the same.
I grew up though, far away now, with the heavy weight of knowledge on my back and the feeling of sweat on my brow. I have heard a lot, and that soundless world where I spent all of my time looking and none of my time listening is gone. I listen and I look now, and I tell a girl about my observations while she marvels and tells me what to do with them, but there is nothing much to become when despite my ambition I hold myself back with the most unholy things.