wake up
in a new place
(having stayed up too late
in another new place)
but seeing old friends
is more than worth it.
wake up
in a new place
(having stayed up too late
in another new place)
but seeing old friends
is more than worth it.
travels usually take
hours upon hours upon hours
(our go-to vacation spots/chill with family spots
have historically taken 8-ish hours.)
(tack onto that traffic/stops with dog/
my tiny bladder/
mostly traveling in seasons bombarded with snow;
our bodies are prepared for travel
to be the only event in a day.)
so when a “vacation trip” takes four/four and a half hours
(five-fifteen with stops/the traffic that inevitably erupts around nyc)
there is an excess of energy when we arrive at our destination.
but the question for tonight was:
“is that enough to meet one young child and two toddlers?”
and the answer was,
unequivocally
“yes!”
[although the dog with bows through her fur
may profess otherwise]
looking forward
to being in Maryland
for many reasons
(one of which is being reunited with my
BROTHER)
(another is being able to hold
My Son
once more),
but also because
it means
i’ll have some travel
to poem about
to put into this
(originally conceived of)
travel
poetry
blog.
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?