Recharging.
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I get caught up in a funeral procession, stuck at the traffic light, right next to the limousine that bears a withered, anguished face, looking. But all I ever see is me. I take my age times two but there’s no cushion now. Two times my age equals dead. The light changes and I sudden stomp the pedal accelerate for an adrenalin rush, try and leave that image mercifully behind, time and distance work like Novocain. My city is small, so I quickly reach rolling farmlands, put down the top, and let Van Morrison croon soulful sound waves to the blue, blue sky. I drive along the murky river, past a small sand and gravel plant blemished metal, angular, skeletal, insect-like. The dredge putters and scrapes the west shore, boils water in a great brown cloud. I cross the iron bridge, rumble and vibrate, then park beside the harvested field. Stubbed shafts divide the dry earth in rows winding parallel to the river. As if deliberate, one lone cornstalk stands thinly defiant, flutters a single leaf pennant that would crisp crumble in my grasp. I walk the stiff grass edge of the field, crush a soil clod, and feel its dryness in my teeth. My coming forces the crow to fly, a callous scolding follows his clumsy takeoff. To the west, gold-leafed maples border the field, and their pungent decay reminds me of sun-dried peaches. As the sun drifts below the treetops, I find the place where the line is drawn, the line between shadow and light, ever creeping. I sit cross-legged in light, and allow shadows to overtake me like some sleepy tidal wave, symbolically I face the ever-changing without struggle, with courage, acceptance, and trust. I whisper-chant my soulful thought waves to the blue, blue sky: take me where I need to go teach me what I need to know. |