Wednesday, April 4, 2007
"Interchange"
I am driving in my car slowly,
the tires making dull thuds
into the potholes,
like small craters in the earth
that are the remnants of winter's salt.
Dried, brown leaves dart
across the cragged pavement
in the blustery beginning of spring.
They remind me of tiny children
running and jumping across
the schoolyard, escaping their prison
on the last day of classes.
The sun fractures through
the leafless trees somehow
bright and soft simultaneously.
I squint my eyes to its luminance
to look upon the sky crystalline
and blue like the waters
of a warm ocean I have never seen.
Clouds crawl like tortoises,
their great humped backs
like stepping-stones
across a small, babbling creek.
There is an old man
with gray whiskers
on his dilapidated bicycle
in front of me,
his frail, skinny leg a kickstand.
He is still dressed for winter
and his navy coat is stained
with many years of misuse.
His dingy, orange knit cap
pulled tightly to his skull
makes me think of aging,
makes me think of the
degradation of the human body
over time,
how year by year
we lose fat and sinew
as our bodies require less
and less of us to survive.
I lament the fact
that each day spent living
is another day spent dying,
that each moment experienced
is a moment of the past.
The interchange so minute
that we don’t begin to see it
until it is too late.
Aleathia Drehmer 2007
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1 comment:
you have an amazing descriptive ability...
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