During the cold wet spring of this year, when outside
activities were limited by, seemingly, constant days of precipitation and
unseasonably cool weather, I thought ahead to summer and saw it filled with
ripe potential to be the sweetest season yet. When it arrived however, I had a
variety of social engagements like graduation and good bye parties and showers
and weddings which happily filled the weekends, but also limited time for
outdoor pursuits. Bike rides and hikes were in short supply. Time to enjoy the
figurative fruit of the season was limited. This evening however, it all came
together like orchestral magic.
On a bike ride through some of the most scenic areas of
Chester County, I felt I had become a character in an amazing story book. As
each gravelly page was turned, I encountered new treasures that delighted the senses.
The self-created, perfect breeze travelled with me like the shadow of the wind. The seasonal scent of cut grass and fragrant greenery became
intoxicating as can only happen in the humid air of summer. Horses, heron, deer
and bunnies all presented themselves playfully to me as though inviting me to
follow them into the secret corners of their outdoor world. My bike flew
effortlessly along, like those carrying the riders on the final day of the tour
de france on the Champs-Elysees. And the sounds of the birds and the creeks,
soothed and soared, like Mozart’s Canzonetta Sull’aria. I didn’t want this story to end.
But the sun was setting on this operatic stage and darkness
soon would make biking unsafe. One of the final roads I must take is like a
dark tunnel when dusk nears. The trees overhead and all around come together,
joining limbed forces to block any remaining day light. Through this tunnel, I
pedaled hard and fast, at times feeling like I was riding to escape the monster
coming up behind. And then finally, before me, the light and safety of home
loomed, leaving the monster to fade into the darkness. The tunnel ended and the
pinkish orange sky framed the dusky green fields where golden bales of hay were
gathered and left to sit, like scattered players on a huge game board. It was a
comforting, pastoral sight that brought peace to the journey’s end. While the
journey ended for tonight, the story of the sweet season of summer will
continue to be experienced and cherished, like a child’s favorite bedtime story
that never grows old.
No comments:
Post a Comment