i suppose what i am trying to say - though i am loathe to have to spell it out - is that it's all very well being nostalgic about the past, and seeking a reminder of it in the young around you, but we must not be too precious about our youth; it's been, it's gone, so be it. the "centre" of the poem is probably
"Life is fair and the present is fine; the present is superior for it fathers all conjecture"... in other words, all we have is the right now, and wherever you are right now is the most important place you've ever been.
however, that is
one way of looking at it. i don't believe the poet should necessarily be the authority on the meaning; if a reader was to say "no, i understood it differently", or took the whole thing to be ironic, i would say ok, fine, i am happy that at least something occurred for you.
i don't so much have a problem with it being misunderstood, or non-understood. what annoys me is that your response was to criticise
because you misunderstood. if i read a poem and find it inscrutable, i either think ok, this poet is not for me, or i re-read, and re-read, until i have formulated my own meaning...or simply found myself enjoying the words!
i like your 16-second poem a lot! it's fun. but i don't necessarily agree with this:
it means whatever you want it to mean, which means that it means nothing
i don't think that's true just because you say it. furthermore, it allows no credit to the reader. anyway, what relation does it have to my poem? they are two very different pieces.