The tide gathers trash in the corners of the dock, here in my corner of Baltimore’s harbor, by the walls that raise us above the water; it quietly floats, a fragile surface that appears as if it would support a hesitant foot in motion. But to do so would be to find it is but pieces, a story with only characters and an ending; each thought a fading sentence without predicate, a child that falls as it runs down the steps, face in the gravel, only to rise and continue toward the water. You would think God would have a giant net to skim this surface; to let the fish beneath be given a chance at oxygen and algae without eating cigarette butts, and the mallards that swoop, almost lost amongst the cold concrete and pylons that shape the ledge just beyond them, a chance at the fish. Maybe it will happen, maybe it will just take longer than a day; a gentle curve that slopes inconspicuously down the radius of a mountain. It would be nice just to glide down, but speed requires deceleration for control. We have rose to the top of that mountain and mined the depth of the sea, still the harbor where they meet becomes the hole where what was deemed useless beholds its resting place. You can’t make a river run straight, just trust it will end somewhere downhill.
There came a point when I couldn’t distinguish between McDonalds and Burger King as the empty bags floated in front of me, they all sell the same thing. They were bits and pieces of songs, fragments of a melody that passed through my ears like sun raging from behind thick clouds and dirty windows. The pieces swirl, I gather them and continue. They reconcile the past and I find I have been looking for her for years. The abrupt change from being the overly defensive soldier, always the first to attack, back to the quiet medic, willing to accept healing as the only viable option. There are only beginnings, even as the flight lands or song ends. There can only be resurgence, loud guitars riding a furious beat, floating organ and a chorus of deep bass. We can go home. It was like high school or before, that first kiss on a dark dance floor in the schools gymnasium, rising toward the first taste of glory and the awkward pressure that leaves you consumed and drained. It used to be an endless fascination with consumption, what the other person felt, and a self doubt that was a bloated stomach spewing like the sun over paradise. Now it is ‘she will exist’, the questioning, not worrying; now is how we will move. Is it time for the possibility of ashes rekindling under the cool springs breeze to burst mercilessly into flame? A slumbering breeze that rises from the dark of New Years, the sweet cocaine that replaced snow last winter, the alcohol, the dance, the work that came before the sun should have rose on me.
Yes, I did survive, a tattered card that was shuffled and dealt again. The warden let us dance and sing, albeit a different dance and songs in a language that was vague, but almost familiar. We no longer pilgrimage to the tiger, the fringe and the caves that lie in silent wait. We wait sometimes outside of that roadhouse, but know we really belong within. Its walls carved scrimshaw that depicts glories never attained, where both bone and action have fallen short of potential. Trees line far away roads, the only direction that movement still takes place. Some people want to be crippled, broken down, and cared for, not us. We line up, cattle, since elementary school, single file against the lockers, fastening the clasps to hold down a body bent on projection. We wave our flags, wilder, prouder, now that we see a weakness that is inherent to freedom. Only when we join the wagon train that forces itself to jump back do the halls become crowded and the eyes that stare at our movement become empty. The song dances in its own right, the roulette wheel free from the hand of the croupier.
Have you ever felt like you found your home in a field, or in a car riding toward West Palm Beach, or in a person? A comfort, a fire burning to warm the cold hands that are forever our truest connection to others; our feet that of a wanderer, crossing thresholds of doors that are always open. Where we find a shelter against the pain that rages in open wounds, the wind that spirals around us, a place to rest your head and be lost in the Satori of motion. Even the thief can learn to love and he will, but only when he can forgive the trespasses he committed, the love he so vehemently fought. Those who don’t, like the king who stole everything, will pay for the dark horse that rides their souls, the tide from their vanity flooding the streets of the kingdom. The flowers all know, but only the violets and daffodils will acknowledge; open and make love to thick mud and rain, be born in grasses to wake the dark pasture and make it scream into a meadow. How do we distinguish between what is a beautiful moment, a place captured in time, and the impetuous for a life that was never considered? Is it only by time we measure in phone calls, glasses of wine, and slow dances to Sarah Vaughn in her darkest glory? How do we order a past informed by the dried ink and brittle paper of history? Should I walk this road or turn and run home? Will it be an example of what the attraction should create or a quiet ending to a flame that raged at the moon?