The Safari Zone (For Ashton James)

I started writing a poetry book in lockdown about late Millennials / Generation Z, and this is one of the poems I came up with.

Tré Ventour-Griffiths
3 min readJun 12, 2021

Yes, I wrote a poem about Pokémon … fight me.

I have burned untold days

on Leaf Green, Emerald and Heart Gold

throwing balls at battle beasts for lols

just to give myself a shock to the system

that there’s more to life than 9 to 5

kids in 2016 spoke to me about Pokémon

like they discovered it. They stare perplexed

at my guffaw. I was there in its

heyday of 2004 in battles between

Magma and Aqua, and they still lecture me.

Photo by Thimo Pedersen on Unsplash

I couldn’t blame them. Once those ‘mons

latch on that’s you for life. They spoke of this

new magic called Pokémon Go. I remember

Pokemon 2000 and early Pikachu. iGens cite this

new incantation. And I know I do not look

old enough to remember the early naughties (surprise).

School saw a Pokemon card market:

a shadow ball economy of Gengars and Umbreons

followed by a permeant trading-ban

though trading out of your year-six locker

sounded cooler back then; today

children of ten are YouTube millionaires

and the underground of my schoolyears

Photo by Steven Cordes on Unsplash

pales in comparison. When I talk to today’s youth

on how I recall battling Misty and Brock –

while they were in their mother’s womb…

I feel really old. The grey streak

on the right side of my head bulks up

and it’s in my grey hairs that sit the things

Gen Z will never understand what Pokemon did

for late millennials. I named my brother

for Ash Ketchum. He’s twelve now, and will never

understand why I see

Northampton in Pallet Town.

If I could take him to 2000, I would –

In the enthusiasm of primetime Mewtoo,

lodged in my aorta. However,

I cannot even join our minds

like those Vulcans, to show him

those long years of primetime television

they don’t make kids tv like that anymore.

Photo by Elias Andres-Jose on Unsplash

Adventure Time and Gumball will be

what he’ll be chatting about in a decade

the things that made his childhood

I emerge from the Safari Zone

the tall grass of a world before Tik Tok,

Twitter and Facebook. I do what

I do best, use my last repels

avoiding major battles — sit looking

into the Gameboy screen and remember.

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Tré Ventour-Griffiths

Award-Winning Educator | Creative | Public Historian-Sociologist | Speaks: Race, Neurodiversity, Film + TV, Black British History + more | #Autistic #Dyspraxic