My crush comes flashing neon red, a stoplight pulse inside my head. It hums beneath my quiet skin, a siren song I’m pulled right in. I try to cool it down to blue, pretend I feel what others do, but every thought ignites instead, my heart lit up in neon red. It glows too loud, it won’t behave, a reckless color I can’t save. If love’s a sign I should have read— it’s blazing bright in neon red.
This poem should be framed and hung on the wall of every child because it quietly but powerfully rewrites the limits adults so often place on young minds. Shel Silverstein moves through the language children hear every day—“don’ts,” “shouldn’ts,” “impossibles”—and then deliberately overturns them, replacing restriction with possibility. It’s not just encouragement; it’s permission. In a world that conditions children to measure themselves against rules, outcomes, and expectations, this poem offers a counter-voice that affirms imagination as something valid, necessary, and enduring. Displayed on a wall, it becomes more than decoration—it becomes a daily interruption of doubt, a reminder that creativity and belief are not naive, but essential.
What makes this poem especially meaningful to me is that I didn’t encounter it as a child, but as an adult—around thirty-one—when I bought Where the Sidewalk Ends for myself. And yet, it felt instantly familiar, as if it had been waiting for me all along. I didn’t have to memorize it; it simply stayed, embedding itself into my thinking like a quiet anthem for the daydreamer I’ve always been. That lasting imprint is exactly why it belongs in a child’s environment. If it can reach an adult with that kind of permanence, imagine what it can do for a child who grows up seeing it every day—before the world has a chance to convince them otherwise.
She wakes before the world is ready and carries the day anyway. She learns early how to hold two truths at once: strength and softness, fear and resolve. She becomes fluent in adaptation—not because she wants to, but because life keeps asking. She is not extraordinary because she never breaks. She is extraordinary because she does—and still shows up. Still laughs. Still loves. Still chooses to care in a world that profits from her silence. She knows the cost of being accommodating and the risk of refusing. She edits herself for safety, then unlearns that habit slowly, painfully. She practices saying no without apology and yes without explanation. She holds generations in her body—lessons passed through glances, warnings whispered, courage inherited. She becomes a refuge for others even while learning how to rest herself. She is both unfinished and enough. If you listen closely, you will hear it: not just what she endures, but what she imagines into being. Still, she is here. Still, she matters. Still, she is becoming.
He schools his breath, keeps posture loose, let's confidence arrive unforced, measures every word he chooses, hoping charm won’t sound rehearsed. He watches how her laughter lands, files each detail in his mind, steps close enough to feel the heat, but far enough to seem benign. He wonders if she feels it too, that current passing hand to hand, and plots no ending—only this: to stay, to spark, to gently stand.
She notes the pause he leaves in air, the careful way he doesn’t lean, the practiced ease, the sideways glance that asks more than what’s seen. She feels the pull but guards her ground, lets silence test what words can’t prove, decides if this is hunger masked or patience shaped like truth. She meets his gaze, not giving much, but not retreating from the flame— she’ll choose the pace, the depth, the door, and whether he may stay.