Frog publicity

I ’M nobody! Who are you?
Are you nobody, too?
Then there ’s a pair of us—don’t tell!
They ’d banish us, you know.

How dreary to be somebody!
How public, like a frog
To tell your name the livelong day
To an admiring bog!

~Emily Dickinson

I love this poem. I’ve known this one for years–it’s one that frequently gets anthologized in middle school English textbooks. I’ve always found it charming and quirky. “How public, like a frog” I find particularly amusing.

As with all good poems, the meanings and nuances of this one have deepened and grown richer for me over years. Reading this as a middle schooler, I was convinced it was about the joy of finding the other weirdos. I still think it is, and now I see more in it, too. As an adult, I read this poem as deeply counter-cultural.

Dickinson wasn’t writing in an age of social media, but this poem seems prescient. When I read it as an adult, I can’t help but think of all the people I know of who broadcast their every life event over the interwebs. From the rare and wondrous, like the birth of a child, to the mundane, like hanging out in a backyard with the people you always hang out with, so many people put so much on social media in the search to “be somebody.”

I feel like a curmudgeon. I don’t post pictures of my children because I feel strongly that they ought to have the same opportunities I’ve had to control their own social media presences. I can’t help but feel a little FOMO when other people are posting pictures of their beautiful kiddos and everyone is exclaiming over them. But in the end, the frog-publicity just doesn’t feel right for me and my children.

Maybe I’m a holdout. Maybe I’m on the wrong end of history here. But I know my children, and I want to respect what they want. I want them to be able to say, “What’s out there for public consumption is something I control.” In an age when it feels that our autonomy is subsumed by systems and even a waiver for a kid to go play at a gym includes a clause stating that the company gets to use their image for promotional purposes from now until forever, I want my kids to feel that they have some say. I want them to understand the value of privacy.

So I’m still one of the weirdos. There’s always the temptation to be public like a frog, to win the admiration of the bog–but in the end, that’s all it is–bog admiration. You can get bogged down in it. You can forget what’s important. You can lose yourself.

I would rather be one of the weirdos.

Bittersweet blossoms

LXVIII
As children bid the guest good-night,
And then reluctant turn,
My flowers raise their pretty lips,
Then put their nightgowns on.


As children caper when they wake,
Merry that it is morn,
My flowers from a hundred cribs
Will peep, and prance again.

~Emily dickinson

Crocuses have begun peeping from the barren earth. Incongruously bright against the dead grass, they dot the brown with tiny firework-explosions of white and purple.

Each plant sends forth a single bloom, so when my newly ten-year-old son comes running with a minuscule blossom clamped between two fingers, I am lanced with bittersweetness. That flower is done, gone. My little boy, not so little anymore, still brings me the first flower he finds every spring.

Parenthood is like that, love laced with delight and punctuated by constant reminders that no moment is forever.