Day
22 of the NaPoWriMo challenge at www.napowrimo.net.
Prompt: In
her poem, Thanking
My Mother for Piano Lessons, Diane Wakoski is far more grateful than I
ever managed to be, describing the act of playing as a “relief” from loneliness
and worry, and as enlarging her life with something beautiful. Today, we’d like
to challenge you to write a poem about something you’ve done – whether it’s
music lessons, or playing soccer, crocheting, or fishing, or learning how to
change a tyre – that gave you a similar kind of satisfaction, and perhaps still
does.
Hear the
dragon roar
human versus
bicycle,
this steel
dragon once so reliant,
always
doing my bidding,
now a
scarefest on two wheels,
stabilisers
deftly removed by my father.
suspecting
it wouldn’t be upright much longer.
I think my
dad knew too.
But he
just watched. He didn’t judge.
I took a
deep breath.
Dad held
it steady. I needed that.
the tremble,
the twist, the inevitable splat!
You spent
quite a lot of time on concrete
when learning
how to tame a bike,
unstabilised,
untethered,
a wild horse
exerting its will.
the bye-bye,
sayonara, to those extra wheels
that said
you were still a child.
I wasn’t
claiming to be grown up.
I knew I’d
never be a contender for the Tour de France.
I’d spend
a lifetime sucking mud.
Jaws
silent. In motion. Reliant.
Steady as
she goes.
We’d speed
down the steepest, highest hill,
kinda dizzy
with the thrill of it,
free as
the wind.
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