Goofy
Brandon Cook
My wife and I bought drinks at Disneyland
And the mouse sure knows how to make a Manhattan
As we sat, with our kids asleep in the stroller, on a plush couch
In my periphery, a man walked by our window with such happy zest, my brain balked
“No one is that happy, he’s hiding something,” I thought, before turning to see
That it was just Goofy
Literally, a man dressed up as Goofy,
A character on a stage to assuage, in some way (and not unlike my liquor), the daily pain of life
Creating in his walk enough space for sighing and for smiles
He walked with such purpose in his cartoon rendering,
No doubt off to bungle a car repair, banging his thumb ’til it throbs,
Though, no worries, a few frames later, it will no more be inflamed,
And even if, while catching fish, he hooks instead his own britches, they will be re-born
without a tear
No wonder he is so happy (I thought without thinking, as I sipped my drink):
In this magic place, Goofy is always marching into the fray for us,
A beautiful dream of what might be
Sore thumbs, torn pants, broken dreams all so easily mended
A balm to these endless human hearts, with their joy and pain,
And their endless capacity to feel both things