There was a time when the world seemed an easy spoil of conquests within reach-and we were young and blinded, sure of our steps in every wrong direction. We were free and unspoilt, unchristened in the many facts and figures that took us down a long road to destiny.
Who cared about the roofless sky the waters rage, the waterfalls incessant spill and magnificent spray that baptised us in wonder. Who cared about the drumbeats at the dead of night and nightmares that gripped the soul in its tangled knots. We were Woodstock and Glastonbury, full of Vietnam wars and journeys to the Moon and Nixon and FlowerPower. We were filled with everybody else but ourselves. We were free from the chains of society.
And then the cells closed in, the ranks faltered Moguls took over the stockmarkets and the jobs were dismantled and monopolised the riches were ransacked and the free love potions that came with cannabis and upside down waterfalls bleeding chairs and rock music beads and baubles and denim fantasies became tagged with slave labour and oil spills and mountains of rubble stored in giant cities of concrete boxes. All the worlds cities were locked in invisible borders that shot people down with laser beams and synthetic drugs and coloured t shirts. We were locked back into our freedom cubbyholes that were now governed by empty heads with dark glasses and steel rimmed belts that zapped you into line.
Four decades of smouldering in the rubble left us limbless and mindless technology does our work now and our brains are frozen and hacked with strange numbers of which we know little. We cannot love again freely.
The remnants of those decades still linger on the borders of the soul where butterflies once flew and songs were belted out one after the other into giant stadiums where people danced with bare skins coated with mud and magic. The pink stripes never really vanished, but our bodies still alert to joyous music that the whole world clapped and rattled to. Gone.
Our world was taken from us and the poor ******* that now stretch down the clogged highways of the mind and roadways of consumption without work will never understand how we lived and learned and laughed in that free open world.