No Going Back.

July 1: I’m driving on a back road to a nearby town where there’ll be the traditional New England small town Independence Day festivities, when I suddenly realize I can no longer see the road before me. The road dips down and then rises up. I know this, because I’ve driven this road so many times. I know precisely where to swerve around the persistent pothole where the stream runs under the lowest point of the road. But the rise is hidden in smoke.

The day marks a line for me, a place I won’t forget. I’ve been here before; this is familiar territory. I remember the precise afternoon I knew I would severe my marriage. Likewise, today, it’s clear to me that this smoke, in what will likely be one unimaginable variation after another, will remain.

Nonetheless, I go on into the day, watch the parade with an old acquaintance and we catch up about kids, ruminate about our old college days. I talk to a woman who’s built a house of cans and bottles and tires. She asks me to stop by sometime. Heck, who could pass that up? Of course I will.

Then I’m back home again, working, working, on this third book, taking it apart, sewing it back together, phrase by phrase. I wind in how it feels to walk along the edge of a lake that may not be frozen and thread through the Himalayan blue poppy, a child’s nightgown, pebbles under a clear running stream. I’m after those same old things: how to salvage order and beauty from chaos and destruction and despair. A river of sadness is not the torrents of despair.

Swim. Bartzella peonies. My neighbor leaning out her door, green curlers in her hair, saying hello.

6 thoughts on “No Going Back.

  1. Yes. This is expressed so beautifully. I too am realizing that this is just the beginning. Pandemics, wildfires. What will become our next “normal?” It feels hopeless. But we can still find the beauty. It’s what I try to do daily. Your writing is definitely something that I look forward to and brings beauty to my life. Thank you!

    • One of the deep joys of writing a blog is connecting with people I’ve never met. Thanks for writing in and sharing your piece of optimism, too. And hello, on this rainy Vermont morning….

  2. I’ve only been to Vermont once and I’ve only read about the smoke you are facing. In Texas we have had our own problem, with an unusual heatwave. Luckily it is starting to become less hot, still hot but not the 105 degrees / 117 real feel we had a few days ago.

  3. Thank you for your honesty and picking a piece of the day , a simple thing that perks your memory and off you go with words to make sense…
    Good luck working on the book.

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