This, a gorgeous fall day, was my last full day visiting family. A few weeks ago, a local mom I barely know let me stay in her apartment so that I could start work in earnest on my novel. Whenever I get out of my comfort zone, I always find that I breathe differently, appreciate things in a new way, and enjoy the quotidien at least a little more, at least for a little while. And sometimes being removed from routine results in a totally new one upon return.
I’d love to hear other folks’ reflections on how travel this holiday season — or any time — gives you new perspective.
Baggage
It doesn’t much matter
where you go
to escape your own chaos
whether into a hotel room
feigning uniqueness
or into another’s home
filled with clutter
that asks nothing of you
Any walk
that is not yours daily,
past tall apartment buildings
with too many people
you will never know,
or in a neighborhood of
bungalows that squat
like a limber toddler
or stone homes
sporting peaks
like a family of
perky witches,
any walk can be
away from everything you know
and toward anything
you forgot you wanted
to discover.
————
After casting aside my poetry hat for far too long, my NaBloPoMo plan is to write a poem — and to take and post a photo — every day in November, spending less than half an hour on both. The hope is to drill down, to focus, to look for and create beauty.
Previous Posts:
Day 1: Eleven One
Day 2: Shoreline
Day 3: Damage
Day 4: On Parenting and Sunrises
Day 5: When will we?
Day 6: Voting Line
Day 7: What I want my children to learn from me
Day 8: Haiku
Day 9: Reminders
Day 10: Routine
Day 11: Lux Esto, in moderation
Day 12: Family Photo Shoot at (nearly) 4o
Day 13: Siblings
Day 14: Point of View
Day 15: Background
Day 15: Greener Grass
Day 16: Journey
Day 17: From two to twelve
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.