To a young executive





 To a young executive


Your tailored suit looks good, I know,
and the tie you’ve chosen matches well.
You’re working, what, twelve hours at a go?
A tempting mortgage beckons you,
Your promotion prospects are second to none,
but, wait, you’re only 21!

If now you make your business thrive,
what will you do when you’re 45?

Leave it!  Chuck it in!
Travel the earth and fly the sky,
grab your trainers, pack and go
to the airport, take a plane,
take a plane to the ice and the snow.

With frozen hands on a mountain peak,
pull yourself  to the top of the world
and as you stagger the final step,
see half of Asia at your feet.

Or push your legs through the desert sand,
as the sun burns down on your head and your neck,
and a cruel, hot wind dries up your lips,
while you dream of a beer in your shaking hand,
as you gaze half-blind through a storm of dust,
you’ll then begin to understand.

Follow the river brown as earth,
through the dark red hills of Africa,
where the hippos sleep in mud,
and camels drink for a waterless week,
and girls are laughing as they work,
and babies bounce on mothers’ backs,
and market sellers in their shacks
will call you over for mint tea,
then, only then, will you start to see.

So when you’re tired, at 55,
with your cushioned chair and your pension scheme,
and when your office window shows
a view of endless office windows,
and an unforgiving computer lists
a line of emails which hourly grows


then, when the room is small and the coffee is cold,
and the light is dim at the end of the day,
when your eyes are tired and your neck is sore,
then think back 30 years before,
and remember what you did,
and remember what you saw.

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