—remembering Okoboji, Iowa, 1957
of our little roller coaster car taking us slowly,
irrevocably upward to the top of the carnival until,
click click click — we slowed more, hesitated,
then, cresting out, began to fall, my guts whirling,
my primate grip strangling the safety bar,
my eyes locked shut on what we couldn’t help
being headed for, straight down—
then, picking up speed, the inevitable letting go
because we had no other choice, against a force
huger than carnivals, planets, universes—
so we all opened our eyes and reached as high
as we could for moons, for stars, then came
our avalanching screams…
That’s it—exactly what I need to get back to:
that letting go (minus the giddy guts), with my eyes
fiercely wide open, each day seconding Prospero’s
“be cheerful, sir,” and Lao Tzu’s tree bending
in the wind, each day looking forward to enjoying
what’s left of the ride, the carnival, the life.
Photography credit: Unknown (originally color).
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