Summer mornings, as I round out the bend in the well-traversed road, the new sun imposes itself in the cloudy rearview mirror, and, for a moment, I am blind, the way ahead obscured by gnats of light teasing my weary eyes the yellow white of the desk lamp I set atop the chest of drawers and tilted at such an angle that I glowed as I emoted to a rapt crowd of stuffed creatures enthralling tales penned in crayon on snap fresh construction paper, words I knew would only better as I much too slowly matured into my God-given talents, for my life would not be wasted swatting the blinding memories every blasted summer morning as I crawl across the bridge to the work side of the river