December3
To the Gadoodleborgers;
translators, bridgekeepers between worlds.
![](http://blog.donnawilliams.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/wonderment-sml-218x300.jpg)
He spied her in a magic wood,
a sensing creature in need of none
![](http://blog.donnawilliams.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Enchantment-sml-238x300.jpg)
and dreamed of how he’d join her there,
his partner she would soon become.
He lured her back to the place he knew;
a world of hierarchy and of power.
![](http://blog.donnawilliams.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Eleanor-sml-187x300.jpg)
And there she then began to die,
as surely as a wilting flower.
![](http://blog.donnawilliams.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/voyage-sml.jpg)
His heart began to break inside,
he knew only one thing to give.
![](http://blog.donnawilliams.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Life-on-Earth-sml-224x300.jpg)
Return her to her sensing world,
that she might find the will to live.
And there as she began to bloom,
she saw something he’d never seen.
![](http://blog.donnawilliams.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Belonging-sml-209x300.jpg)
That he was not of that world either,
a Gadoodleborger, he had been.
That he walked between two worlds,
he now had finally understood.
![](http://blog.donnawilliams.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Sanctity-sml-300x294.jpg)
And so they made their home in neither world,
at the edges of the magic wood.
The End
NOTES:
The Gadoodlborger is a term that became familiar in my book Somebody Somewhere. It denoted a person who could translate different ‘normalities’, a ‘bridgekeeper’ between different worlds. It was the highest compliment I could pay to those who understood instinctually there was no one ‘normality’ and the inherent equality in difference – what it was to be naturally and truly diversity friendly. Read the rest of this entry »