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Replying to a comment on:
Walking Home (Free verse) by EAger to Offend
Alone in Septemberâs afternoon sun after the first day of kindergarten,
it was high adventure at age five. I charted the mile course with
survival instinct, not knowing how routine this lonely path would become.
God died in October and I held on in wait for his return hoping he was
watching me from behind some tree.
Adam was my hero then, even though he soon shirked me too, and I was
packed with a stick and a bag of plastic armour for Saturday morning
practice.
Perhaps a thousand days later I was stabbed again. Goddess was still in
mourning and sent Adam into exile for sins of disrespect. Bad enough he
dallied with Eve, but finding his hot-knives in the closet was the last
straw.
My grades sank. I didnât sleep except to sleep in. âLateâ
described me. It all came down in a shitstorm of childhood science at a
third grade soccer game when, after a year of contemplation I said it
with great deliberation; that four-letter word of no fixed meaning, the
utterance of the self-determined and the defeated. I was not struck
down. I would never fear the dead again.
Through every season I walked that mile; across the townships rails when
in spring the creek flooded; under itâs vast summer shadetrees; and up
the orange-gold carpet of maple leaves on a steep, slippery rock cut in
rainy autumn. Still, closest to my heart are those lonely winter walks
after high school wrestling practice. My hair frozen into a long
scraggly helmet, my eyelashes sticking, I looked up at the white flakes
on the night sky that became black against the street lamps glow. At
sixteen I still suffered that although I would never fear the dead, I
could not help but miss him.
That mile is mine. I have secured it with a million footfalls. It
knows my secrets. And, though generations shall tread its course, it
shall always possess me.
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