Heroes wear beige.
Heroes wear beige.
Do we really understand
The human cost
Fat flies circle dead meat
The rotting carcass is a magnet
For the scavenger
The pond is drained of life
When the big fish die
Leaving their stench to frighten away
The wild dogs
Which never works
As the food chain is always broken
From the bottom-up.
Pit Bull's face-off
Whiskers bristling, unshaven heads
Butting like rutting stags
Wasting their energy on dance moves
When no one is impressed by a showman.
The deadliest attacks
Are the ones unseen
The drab brown thing,
The bookworm in the corner
Gnawing at the pages of a paperback
Turning the learning
Into warcraft
Superpowers are not needed
Keyboards are springloaded
Push button operators
Are not trained
They are born into a role.
Kindergarten gamesmanship
Is an early learning experience
Stand-offs are practised
In team sports
The giants of the game
Wear padded shoulders
To impress the girls
And take their superiority
Into the boardroom
Which can easily be a war room
When testosterone is on the rise
There is only one winner.
But victory is never as sweet
As the after-dinner mints
At a table in the corner,
When intimacies are shared
And truths are laid out with little
Elaboration,
The only time vulnerability
Is seen as an advantage.
Superstars circle, warily
Strutting birds
Spreading their plumage
To emphasise their size,
Glorify their lineage.
The little brown mouse
In the beige suit is often overlooked
Until the beans need counting
And then he is a genius
At estimating human costs
Understanding the balance of power,
Putting a lid on extremes,
Taking the Elephant out of the room.