Under a canopy of wizened limbs
They rise from catacombs of winter horizons
In the middle of the journey of my life, I am--as always--a woman on a bike. Although I do not know where this road will lead, the way is not lost, for I have arrived here. And I am on my bicycle, again.
I am Justine Valinotti.
The Spring equinox is less than two weeks away. I can see that days are growing longer: Today I started a ride to Greenwich, Connecticut--140 kilometers round trip--and, even with a half-hour lunch stop in Greenwich, managed to get home before dark.
Although the trees are still bare in the Veterans' Memorial, I saw some green shoots in the ground. And I saw another sign of the day's mood in front of Town Hall:
Artist Charlie Hewit created this work to resemble the 1950s and 1960s highway road signs that pointed to restaurants, diners, hotels and other businesses. Their bright colors and bulbs were meant to beckon potential customers, much as Hewit's sign is, perhaps, a call to better days ahead.
A call--and a yearning. People walking with their dogs, and each other, shed their literal as metaphorical coats; their tired, aching psyches seemed to be reaching for hope just as those green shoots turn toward the fleeting light and warmth of a spring almost begun, their limbs thrusting through ashes and bones turned to mud by melting snow.
A new season beckons on the horizon, much as the sunset served as a call, not only to finish this day's ride, but toward more rides, more days, ahead.
From Kevin's Travel Journal |
From Easy As Riding A Bike |
Assisi, Italy. By Aaron Huey, in The National Geographic, July/August 2007 |