Monday, October 26, 2009

Crushed flowers and soda

I am a child.

in a car

going to the Hargrove's

wanting to play in their yard


Wanting to see their daughter.

her straight hair makes me want to be held,

her neck makes me want to hold

I don't yet know the difference between the two feelings


We arrive to hushed voices.

the words, "I don't understand why." are whispered

I don't connect the words to anything


I like the yard.

full of holes to hide in

dirt which is perfect for building and fighting and rolling in


I see them through plate glass windows with tears on their faces.

I throw rocks at walls and no one stops me

turn on the hose to make a rushing river


I can see her window from where I play.

know it will smell like crushed flowers and soda

want to be there but don't know why


I am inside now, after lunch.

walk down the hall to her room

sit on her bed wishing she was there teasing me

I don't wonder where she is


I know that she is dead.


I think about her straight hair and her neck.

put my head on her pillow and breath her in

don't remember crying

don't remember leaving her room


Later my mom tries to explain why someone so loved would take their own life.

pretend to cry

pretend I don't understand


Thursday, October 22, 2009

Why


I could feel the rumble of my motorcycle below me, its two wheels connecting me to the ground. I could hear the wind buffeting my helmet. My senses seemed sharper, more aware, more... alive. I felt content with the exception of one thing: A question that a stranger had asked me when I last stopped for coffee.

A simple question really.

"Why?"

"Why do it? Why take the risk?"

At the time, I had responded with my usual spiel. "MSF, full gear, defensive riding, blah, blah..." The truth is, motorcycling is a risk. Yes, one can minimize that risk, but it IS a risk. And one that shouldn't be taken lightly.

So I asked the question aloud to myself as I rode. It echoed in my helmet. It echoed in my mind. Why? Why do you do it? You have a wife and two children, you have friends... why take the risk? My mind was blank for a moment. Without my defensive spiel, I was at a loss. But only for a moment. And then the reasons came flooding in. Many reasons.

I only needed one.

When I was 10, my mom met a man named Jesse (who was later to become my step-father). Having been without a father since I was a baby, I was uncomfortable around him, but liked him because he treated me like a young man. I was a small, awkward kid, and picked on at school quite a bit. He helped me forget some of that.

Jesse and my mom had a date planned on a Saturday afternoon, and he asked if I'd like to come. I, of course, answered yes, and the three of us piled into his old, beaten-up truck and headed out. We drove in silence for about 30 minutes and then pulled into an open dirt field near the edge of town. I jumped out of the truck and noticed that Jesse was pulling the tarp off of a small mini-bike in the back of his truck. He exchanged a smile with my mom that told me this was a planned event. He pulled the bike from the truck and rolled it toward me. It was red. Without exchanging a word, I sat down on it. He asked me if I'd ever ridden before. I told him "no," thinking that by saying that I might lose my chance to ride. He just smiled and pulled a helmet from his truck. He handed it to me and said, "Well, then you'd better wear this."

I put the helmet on, and Jesse told me to steady the bike while he pulled the starter. It started on the first pull. The engine probably sounded like a small lawn mower, but to me, it sounded like magic, it sounded like a jet engine from a spy movie. Jesse gave me some instructions, looked me in the eye and asked if I was ready. My grin must have said yes. He stood behind me with his hand on my shoulders. I slowly twisted the throttle and felt the bike start to move forward. Jesse ran behind me for about ten yards (until I got the nerve to put my feet on the pegs), then he let go.

Freedom is a word that has been used to death. It has been co-opted by corporations and politicians. We see it on t-shirts, underwear and tattoos. But the word... the feeling... of freedom, is REAL. And something that many people don't ever get a chance to understand.

That day, in a dirt field on the edge of town, I felt freedom. Freedom from the bullies at school, freedom from loss, freedom from self-pity, and self-doubt. When I twisted that throttle... I was free. I was ME. And I suddenly understood the word in a much bigger way. In a context that allows me, even to this day, to fully appreciate what I have in this life.

And 30 years later, on a section of open highway this is what I answered:

"Because it is a part of me. That is why I ride."

As the words echoed in my helmet, I twisted the throttle... and for that moment, I was free.


Tuesday, October 20, 2009

completely


dare to breathe life
into your lungs

dare to breathe Pain
into your lungs

dare to hate completely

...to love with equal passion

...to touch warm skin with care

...to break and to build

...to laugh hard

...to cry hard

dare to live

completely


Thursday, October 15, 2009

Sunset


I hate paintings and photos of sunsets.

They're too easy.

They say "look at how beautiful I am, and look no further." There is no need.

ANYONE can see the beauty in a sunset, ANYONE can find beauty in a flower or a pretty girl. And that is where they stop.

But look at the beauty of a hand, or a single finger... or a scar... that is beauty.

When an artist goes about painting a scene of vivid color but he's only got black and white to work with, it becomes all about the shading; the spaces in between the lines, the nuances of emptiness that represent the missing hues.

That is where the real beauty is. If you care to look.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Six


I tried to recall my first thought. The first moment I was aware. I couldn't. I have memories from my youth... But have no idea what my earliest memory is.

I have a vision of standing on a sidewalk. The sun is bright and the sky is unbelievably blue. I feel like I'm six, but I'm not sure.

I feel different from others. Even in this fractured memory, I feel alone. But I'm not sad. No, the sun is on my face, and my feet are wrapped in red cowboy boots. There is white stitching on the boots and that fact makes it seem impossible to be sad.

It's coming back to me, either that, or my mind is pulling memories from other sources... I don't care. I like what I see. I like the fringed suede jacket that I'm wearing (it must be fake suede, but I don't care). I like the hair that brushes my eyes as the wind plays with it.

But most of all I like knowing, that I am the center... I am the ruler of my world... the pain and doubt don't exist in this moment as they did two steps ago. They will return many times, but HERE and NOW on my chunk of sidewalk, I am happy.