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#bicycles
It was the steepest hill Ever I knew. Named for my great, great Grandparents, The Lords, She was family, Especially when snow fell in winter. Not only neighborhood kids, Adults too sled her. Such was her reputation That we had to endure the arrival of An occasional station wagon Full of thrill seeking townies With their shiny, new Department store sleds. She refused to don an asphalt coat That steep she was. Coats of gravel just pooled at her feet So steep she was. One sunny, summer day Cousin Mel and I stood High upon her summit. His legs straddled my beloved Three speed bike Fully equipped with hand brakes, Narrow rims, And leather saddle. I gripped the bare steel bars Of an old wreck borrowed. No brakes? said I. No brakes! we shouted to seal the deal. Even in the foolish loose life of youth I was an all in kind of guy. Oh we flew! Flesh and steel as one, We flew! In my young life, Not in a car, It was the fastest I had ever moved, ……For twenty seconds. It was pure joy, ……For twenty seconds. Then her feet of pooled gravel Seized my front wheel and Shook it the way my dog Lucy Killed garter snakes, Seizing tails in her mouth And whipsawing the creatures with Shakes of her head so violent Their heads parted bodies. Time stopped. I lay dead. Is not complete cessation of breath ……Death? At last time did return, Kept measure of My drumming pain. So as well did breath return, Shallow, weak and wanting, Unable yet to loose a scream. My sight returned, First black, then grey, Then technicolor. I saw Mel’s face so White with fright. Awareness returned, As did feeling in my Skewed and skewered limbs, All atingle and in tangles In my bier of broken brambles. Movement returned, Mel gave me a hand, Tugging at my body, Helping me to stand. It seemed to take forever, Even working together, To free that stupid bike. I lifted up my t-shirt, Pulled it free Of blood and dirt. Those bare steel bars With a slash made a **** Ripping flesh from my chest Clear down to my belly. We walked. My front wheel was as strangely twisted as My fifth grade school teacher Who liked to push a hand down the back of my pants. Strolling our steel steeds homeward, Passing neighbor’s porches, I was seized by a sense of surreal dread. I saw one woman press hands to her head. One mother jumped Clear out of her seat, Her mouth fell gaping, Her gossip fell silent Down at her feet. My own mother ran into the street, Seized me roughly by both arms, Panic poured stinking from her pores Like the sweat of one gripped In the throes of malaria. Even I was startled by my first look in a mirror. It was clear I entered those vines headfirst, Encountered numerous thorns, Which tore a multitude of cuts All about my face and scalp, Areas rich in capillaries whose Only purpose seems to be to bleed, Then maybe bleed some more. There had been enough red rivulets That one could be excused for thinking I had somehow survived An **** of bloodletting. But dang, my belly sure hurt!
0
Sep 20, 2025
Sep 20, 2025 at 6:47 PM UTC
There Are Hills and There Are Hills (an encounter with blackberry bushes)
It was the steepest hill Ever I knew. Named for my great, great Grandparents, The Lords, She was family, Especially when snow fell in winter. Not only neighborhood kids, Adults too sled her. Such was her reputation That we had to endure the arrival of An occasional station wagon Full of thrill seeking townies With their shiny, new Department store sleds. She refused to don an asphalt coat That steep she was. Coats of gravel just pooled at her feet So steep she was. One sunny, summer day Cousin Mel and I stood High upon her summit. His legs straddled my beloved Three speed bike Fully equipped with hand brakes, Narrow rims, And leather saddle. I gripped the bare steel bars Of an old wreck borrowed. No brakes? said I. No brakes! we shouted to seal the deal. Even in the foolish loose life of youth I was an all in kind of guy. Oh we flew! Flesh and steel as one, We flew! In my young life, Not in a car, It was the fastest I had ever moved, ……For twenty seconds. It was pure joy, ……For twenty seconds. Then her feet of pooled gravel Seized my front wheel and Shook it the way my dog Lucy Killed garter snakes, Seizing tails in her mouth And whipsawing the creatures with Shakes of her head so violent Their heads parted bodies. Time stopped. I lay dead. Is not complete cessation of breath ……Death? At last time did return, Kept measure of My drumming pain. So as well did breath return, Shallow, weak and wanting, Unable yet to loose a scream. My sight returned, First black, then grey, Then technicolor. I saw Mel’s face so White with fright. Awareness returned, As did feeling in my Skewed and skewered limbs, All atingle and in tangles In my bier of broken brambles. Movement returned, Mel gave me a hand, Tugging at my body, Helping me to stand. It seemed to take forever, Even working together, To free that stupid bike. I lifted up my t-shirt, Pulled it free Of blood and dirt. Those bare steel bars With a slash made a **** Ripping flesh from my chest Clear down to my belly. We walked. My front wheel was as strangely twisted as My fifth grade school teacher Who liked to push a hand down the back of my pants. Strolling our steel steeds homeward, Passing neighbor’s porches, I was seized by a sense of surreal dread. I saw one woman press hands to her head. One mother jumped Clear out of her seat, Her mouth fell gaping, Her gossip fell silent Down at her feet. My own mother ran into the street, Seized me roughly by both arms, Panic poured stinking from her pores Like the sweat of one gripped In the throes of malaria. Even I was startled by my first look in a mirror. It was clear I entered those vines headfirst, Encountered numerous thorns, Which tore a multitude of cuts All about my face and scalp, Areas rich in capillaries whose Only purpose seems to be to bleed, Then maybe bleed some more. There had been enough red rivulets That one could be excused for thinking I had somehow survived An **** of bloodletting. But dang, my belly sure hurt!
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115
More bicycles here than houses, that makes sense, but -- where are the people?
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Jun 16, 2025
Jun 16, 2025 at 2:25 AM UTC
[ More bicycles here ]
Tree leaves are green, With bark brown like cigar paper. Or at least they were, Back in the 1920's. Oh boy it's hot in here! The planet is starting to sizzle, Quick, ban gas! Better ride my bicycle to places now. We the people, Might be ******* Maybe we can be saved, If we give our money up to Musk, Electric cars are going to save the planet! Well we're gonna need more fuel than that, To ***** wind turbines to replace coal furnaces.
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Jan 18, 2025
Jan 18, 2025 at 11:26 AM UTC
Ecosystem Vs. Economy
What is math? Or, what is understanding math? It is a process of working with establishing information, which is much like finding the keys of a piano when blind. Once the key is played, I remember, however faintly, the steps I needed to find the key. When there are many ways this key is found, it becomes trivial like learning to ride a bicycle or learning to walk. Thus, math understanding truly is a way of making truth less meaningful, almost insignificant. Thus, a branch of knowledge loses its glory, its child-like wonder. How few of us ride a bicycle  today out of fascination for the ride? Yet, just as BMX stars compete globally, so too must a creative mind find tools which will allow me to create. Is math doomed to fate, or will I resurrect it in creative destiny?
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Apr 5, 2021
Apr 5, 2021 at 12:48 AM UTC
BMX and mathematics
I hate bicycles. I hate repairing bicycles. I hate replacing bicycle tires. I hate dismounting bicycle tires. I hate mounting bicycle tires. I hate inflating bicycle tires. I hate barking my knuckles when the wrench slips. I hate scraping my knuckles when the wrench doesn’t slip. I hate the fire ants on whose mound I inadvertently sat while repairing the bicycle. I hate fire ant bites. I hate bicycles. Listening to the radio while repairing, replacing dismounting, mounting, inflating, barking, and scraping is fun, though.
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Oct 8, 2019
Oct 8, 2019 at 3:51 PM UTC
I Hate Bicycles
Losing you was like shedding the extra fat off my belly; I loved it, maybe, too much. Now I stand tall, thin and gaunt. Push me over and I may fall over. Share with me, your story, Allegories of time times you spent alone and vulnerable in a single moment, small as a raisin, large as a glacier. Forget about me, as you live out your journey through song and Calligraphy. You belch and I wipe off the ***** from your chin. Silly me, you say. Take this blade, cut away the fragile hairs from my forearm. Let me go, like a mother unwrapping her fingers around her baby boy's shoulders so that he can ride his blue bicycle and pedal off into the distant sunset. The light is growing, and we are smiling.
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Jan 27, 2017
Jan 27, 2017 at 9:14 AM UTC
Work Out
In a museum, or forgotten barn, A small red twelve inch two wheeler Hangs on invisible wires, Or is covered in pigeon droppings and dust. But Tannehill rode it once, Like something in a dream. He was too long-framed for it. He controlled it, rounded the corner, Pedalling hard down the sidewalk, Across the street from our new house. I gawked from the front yard: He was a boy with his bike, Like *The ****** on T.V. It was the first I learned to ride, And the falls were magnificient, On grass or asphalt. Girls' bikes were easy, One size fits all. Then I learned to pedal Beneath the cross bar of the big boys'. Push the pedals, Shift the midrift, and be gone. Always from somewhere To somewhere else, Far from the soft front lawn.
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Oct 13, 2016
Oct 13, 2016 at 8:59 PM UTC
The Little Red Bike
Setting out, Sun reflects his light through trees bare of leaves, their limbs cast shadows on the road, like veins made visible they lay across the land connecting everything…shift. Ahead, eyes focused forward, the larger picture is laid before me, the details in the distance dance out of bounds, only becoming clear when they wish for me to know them…shift. Standing tall, rising to heed the call of the climb, I feel my breath and hear the beat of my heart keeping time with the turning of my feet. Adversity rides with me, he questions my confidence and fortitude without seeing I have made it this far before…shift. Flying, only downward rather than up. My legs quickly turn, refreshed from the release of tension. The howling in my ears mixed with the rush of speed assures me I am alive…shift. The winds refuse to ease, and they remind me of their promise to make me stronger. My body is slow, but steady is the rhythm, and my acceptance of the challenge rewards me…shift. Behind me now is all that has been achieved. Turning home, Sun warms my shoulders as birds dart from bush to branch, asking me to stay. Shadows grow long while lingering clouds disappear giving way to Moon, her face pale in the hours before twilight…shift. Out here, I am offered perspective. Beautifully, nature eases the effort of riding through life, shifting gears.
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Mar 19, 2016
Mar 19, 2016 at 11:52 AM UTC
Shifting
The pile of pine burned with ferocity While fields of watermellon wore green in generosity Jerimiah delivered rows of assiduous thoughts Fertilized in decisions made years ago Margaret was from Huntsville , working on a divinity degree She was small , rode a bicycle , studying infinity Timid , not unlike a titmouse in spring Margaret had a sister named Judy Jerimiah left for the mountains of Colorado He took only his last name Johnson He spent winters hibernating with the bears He learned to have no fear and grew a long beard Tennennessee is in Alabama , just south of Huntsville A snowslide almost buried Jerimiah Margaret moved to North Carolina got married and that's all I know Jerimiah made tracts in the snow . . . go He sat above the devide looking down Sometimes west when the sun went down But mostly east under the full moon Howling so forlornly the wolves cry Margaret looks west every night Then sheds one tear
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Jan 27, 2015
Jan 27, 2015 at 3:21 AM UTC
I fell down for you once
The bicycles were a forged parent-permission slip But well-forged. I lifted myself over the tear in the truck's seat cover, not sliding Not perforating further for today. The road was short, short enough to have ridden the bicycles from first start to real start. But that would not have been exotic Connection is exotic, and channels must be followed through an antfarm Proper etiquette must be observed with touch-me-nots The bicycles were easier to lift from the bed with two I gave him that, passing a front end, and jammed the wheelspokes with a jabbed finger So that the damp spinning would not flick his face with groundwater I expected it to hurt. My expectation tapped lightly. That narrow pock-marked blacktop was my windtunnel The air stroked its thumbs over my eyelids and I ached to push, breathe, push further He held me back with his slow handlebars, His slow kickstand clicking. Pedaling slowly is more difficult than flying. One finds gladness in choosing leaves to crunch with an inch-wide tire And high-fiving low-hanging branches is socially satisfying. He smiles behind the white mustache, and I don't mind.
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Sep 14, 2014
Sep 14, 2014 at 11:17 PM UTC
Wilson Rd.