Thursday, July 5, 2012

Picnic Kabuki and Literal Legs

At noon, several women at picnic stay in the shade. It's sunny, and the heat will bear down on any lateral skin surface: heads, palms, kneecaps, calf ledges, or neck napes.  They escape from it.  They protect themselves.  I watch as they apply sunscreen like wedding-cake ganache.  In the end, they are Kabuki cyclists.  Silent, they sit amid wedges of watermelon and dark cherries, awaiting some call to the daylight drama of the bike.   There is a group of men of a certain age, old enough to have adult children, on the cusp of retirement or semi-retirement, who are riding with us across the country.  They are tough, as is their skin, which has a tawny, jerky-like sheen.  They strike me as modern-day cowboys on wheels.  I watch them ride, thinking they will all fall behind, but on the steepest hills they charge up steady on their carbon-framed steeds.  Cyclists say these men  have "legs," not the  "sea legs" of sailors, mind you, who learn to recalibrate their balance amid the uncertainty of the ocean.  Their legs are more than sturdy; they are solid, thick, and heavy.  Their legs are literal -- built up over years from by the rise and pitch of each hill.   I imagine if I dissect one, Damian Hirst-style, I could count the rings of their years.

4 comments:

  1. Beyond brilliant! I will carry these images - and new thoughts - along with me all day. I love the contrasting visions you've given me of the riders: the delicacy, the hardiness. Breathtaking. Thank you for bringing us along for the ride!

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  2. I love reading this blog. I was a support driver for a 3-day bike ride years ago, so I know the determination and endurance this must take. Know that I am passing out water bottles and trail mix to you and your fellow riders--in spirit!--and am pushing you up the steep hills with love and prayers. Go Gregs!!

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  3. I love reading this blog too!

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  4. A man who sees the connection between leg muscles and concentric rings of a tree trunk....hence the reference in my poem.
    A thinker, a man who sees beyond the obvious, past the mundane and brings magic to mere mortals. I read on with inpatient anticipation....

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