I made this photograph yesterday morning. Early. Around 6AM. Just after I kissed Robbie goodbye, told him to be careful, told him to take care of his bros, and sent him away to jump fire in California. It was a resplendent morning. Today feels the same. The cabin sits on the edge of a small clearing. Above the clearing the sky opens up. Today, the sky is lightly washed with cloud wisp, like a veil waiting to be burned away, and there is a hawk, crying and circling. It is very still. The light pours through green on green until the underbrush is lit up and rejuvenated, brought back from the stroke of night with the width and breadth of branches reaching. I can’t remember that it will be hot today. I am made forgetful by the cool of the morning.
I say aloud to myself, quite often, at random, “It is summer.” Because summer is fleeting and I want to use it all up, down to the dimes, nickels and pennies. I want to spend my days like a woman obsessed with living.
It is summer. While at the lake with a friend, a few days ago, I was bitten directly on the rump by horseflies, five times. My friend said she could see the welts through my skivvies. I’m convinced I have the itchiest bottom in the entire state of Washington. I hope someone soon relieves me of this honorary title. I was with two other friends the other night and I asked them, “Microcosmically speaking, what do you think it sounds like when a horsefly takes a bite of skin from a body. Skin is tough. There must be a wild ripping sound that is somewhat delightful to them, like when we sink our teeth into corn on the cob and tear the sweet kernels away.” It was obvious to me that they had never wondered about such a thing. Then I felt a litle awkward but mostly gloriously weird.
Do you ever wonder about the tiny things? I hope you do. But not everyone does. It’s not a place of curiosity a person can force the mind to travel to.
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In the open places, on the hillsides, the world trips its way, dizzy with heat, into the browns and yellows of late summer. The bird songs have changed, the bug melodies too. I don’t hear the frogs as often. I saw a cicada for the very first time in my life, at least, I believe it was a cicada. It had the cutest face I’ve ever seen on a bug, a pekinese face, with colorless stained glass windows for wings.
Sometimes it’s so hot I think I am losing my mind. I am tired at night. My words come out cross threaded and backwards when I try to speak aloud.
I have been running. A lot. Despite the heat. Or perhaps because of the heat. It’s almost unbearable at times, being out under the sun and moving fast. When I pass through tall grass in sunny spaces, the grasshoppers cast themselves into reckless leaps. I hear them all the time now, ratcheting their raspy tunes as they chew their tobacco cud. There is an alfalfa field, ripe and fragrant, alive with a bevy of fluttering bugs, watered by sprinklers. It smells fresh and farmy as I pass by. The humidity of hay growing comes at me like a wall of water and I slog for a moment as my sweat suddenly appears and flows down my face, arms and back like spring creeks. My skin doesn’t give way like the land does. I don’t thin away under my own rolling waters.
There is a pond. It is really a dugout. But for the sake of the poetic, I’ll call it a pond here. I have the dogs stop for a swim in it while we run because they begin to trip on their long red tongues and their sides heave so deeply that their ribs are xylophones. In the trees there, I occasionally see an owl (disturbed from its day perch) fly low and swooping; the whomp of its wing beats whirls the tall grasses and clatters the aspen. The woodpecker nest is empty. The skies are a teenaged riot of birds.
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I feel myself reaching for something: obsessively, honestly, patiently. I’m not in a rush. Not for anything. Even though it is summer, and summer is passing by.