We all have stories, these are mine. I tell them with a heart full of love and through eyes of kindness.

The Spoonmaker’s Trial

From a strange dream that didn't make any sense

I stopped one afternoon at the edge of an industrial district, where the wind carried the scent of scorched foam and saltwater. A foam manufacturing plant rose like a blank fortress, its walls echoing with pneumatic sighs. Inside, I met a man who shaped the bases of jet skis — sleek hulls resting in a cradle of styrofoam and memory.

He wore a sleeveless leather apron and eyes full of rusted patience. I asked him what he did, and without a word, he showed me — pressing molds, trimming edges, balancing hydrodynamics with the touch of a sculptor.

Then, as if this were part of some ancient rite, he handed me a lump of metal and said:
“Make a spoon.”

I must’ve looked confused.

“From Roman-era black brass,” he clarified, his voice like the scrape of steel on stone.
“Then take it to be forged.”

I set to work. But my hands were not ready. The brass resisted me, slipping through my fingers like forgotten knowledge. I shaped it poorly. Bent it wrong. When the kiln cracked and smoke rose, I panicked.

I ran.

Down a long and dusty road — it might’ve been 287, though roads in dreams have no mile markers — until the air shifted and I found myself again at the factory gates. I returned in shame, clutching the deformed relic of my failure.

He took it from me, studied it.

And then… he nodded.

“It is a good manufactory,” he said. “And this is approved.”

I didn’t understand the test, or why it mattered, but I left feeling as though I had been initiated into something older than jet skis and molten brass. Something etched into the very act of making.


#writing #dream #100daystoOffload #journal


WolfCast Home Page – Listen, follow, subscribe

Thank you for coming here and walking through the garden of my mind. No day is as brilliant in its moment as it is gilded in memory. Embrace your experience and relish gorgeous recollection.

Into every life a little light will shine. Thank you for being my luminance in whatever capacity you may. Shine on, you brilliant souls!

Go back home and read MORE by Wolf Inwool
Visit the archive

I welcome feedback at my inbox