June 19, 2021

hiking up Machu Picchu
elevated
inclinated
[yes, i know the word “inclined” there would be fine]
my breath failed me
over
and over
and over again

i learned that “possibility of very slight asthma”
that i was diagnosed with
in childhood
really hits you
when the air surrounding you steals your lung capacity.

i was never good at cardio
even now that i’m more fit than i ever was as a child
i dread anything that gathers my heart rate into higher levels

so though i love walking around nature,
the concept of “hiking” only brings joy to my heart,
until we are no longer on level ground.
inclines remind me of the never-ending upwards motion
when my lungs gave out
(but we had places to be
and a time to be there by)

but hiking through the park yesterday
a small amount of incline
to get to a nice picnic area
surrounded by shady tress
i did ok.

(it shouldn’t be surprising
DC is not nearly as far above sea level
as Cusco,
but any upwards movement
comes with a great deal of apprehension)

and i did ok
and we all did ok
(just ok, we could have done better,)
and both my spouse and i
commented
on how four flights of stairs
for the last year and a half
should make us better at hiking up inclines

but it sure does not.

contemplating 2005

i owned a pair of sneakers
inside which i hiked all around
the Australian outback.
i don’t remember if i bought them white on purpose
or not
but they eventually became shaded
rust
from the red dirt
of the outback

and my friends and i laughed
at the customs forms
asking if we were bringing back
any flora/fauna/soil,
because that red dust was embedded
into every article of clothing
and down to our very souls
by that point.

it eventually washed out of fabric,
but every time i wore those shoes
the red just seemed to embed itself
deeper

and my style changed
as the years went by,
and i didn’t wear anything on my feet
except my [off-brand] converse low-tops,
and later my vegan leather boots,
but i vowed to keep those formerly white tennis shoes
so i could always have the reminder of
how i felt in the outback.

i have no idea where those sneakers are today.
they might still be in my childhood closet,
sitting there, keeping my dad company
(solely by proximity),
or we might have packed them in a plastic bag,
and dropped them off at a Goodwill,
and someone might have gotten them,
and the shoes might be walking around right now,
or they might have already been tossed out…

and i think about how many times i looked at those shoes,
contemplating giving them up,
and i thought the point of the memories
was to keep the physical reminder of them
but i think
that if you have the memories strong enough
the reminders
aren’t always completely necessary…

…maybe?