What joy to remove the glasses, both the reflection of midday sun on back of purring Sports Utility and the deep-cut wrinkles in Mr. Rhyne as he walks pretentious Scottish terrier blur. The sun's beams take a drink allowing the world to settle into a point-blank water color -- lovely, blotchy, tame.
Glasses left in passenger seat, shoes laced, shorts of mesh, a sweet breeze makes the leaves fall -- leaves I don't see, but hear, relate. Knee joints slow to start -- oh to be a cartilage machine -- Trees turn from shadow to canopy to cathedral as the miles pass, as sweat rivers and empties into my eyes the vision blurs further. An elderly couple, I tell by their outline, their faces little more than dabs of paint, wish me a good afternoon. A nod acknowledging their passing, a wave to say hello/goodbye and a thought -- will my knees feel this way forever.
A few miles more, the chalky white of eyes turn blood red by streaming salt; I see even less. But under another cathedral of trees, I witness the darkness bend. Shadows twist -- not humoring the wind -- no, to bring attention to my thinning shadow, and a question, *is this movement out of respect, or are the shadows making room for me?