A
Walk in the Woods
Mid
December
rain
slowed to
a
slow drizzle
Time
for a ten-year
old
and his
long
absent father
Slow
quiet heart-filled walk
in
south
Alabama
woods
Over
a carpet of rain soaked
leaves
birds and small
animals
the only sound
Carrying
shot guns
just
in case a squirrel
or
two for supper
See
that hickory
the
one with a
hole
'bout 12 feet up
I
could see it coming
a
story but I had to give
him
time to tell it
When
I was a kid on a day like today
my
Dad and I saw a tall dead tree
with
a hole half-way up
We
never thought
about
a snake
being
in the hole
Went
home got the wagon and
a
crosscut saw came
back
and cut if for firewood
Threw
all the pieces onto
the
wagon never thought the
one
with the hole had a snake
Stacked
all the pieces out
back
of the house including
the
one with the hole in it
Burned
that wood all winter
and
come early spring threw
the one with the hole on the fire
He
quit talking I waited
as
long as I could was there
a
snake in the hole
I
don't know
I
never
thought
about it
One year when I was nine, going on ten, my grandmother
died and my mother and I moved down to stay with my grandfather in
south Alabama for a couple of years to help out. My dad, who had been
teaching for some twenty years with a two year teaching certificate
took that time to go back to college and get his degree. Money was
tight and I don't remember seeing much of my Dad during that time.
The one time I do remember was when he came home for Christmas the
year I turned ten and we went squirrel hunting, just the two of us.
That was when he told me this story. I tell it now with no
overarching purpose except to offer a diversion for these trying
times. I don't know, can snakes climb trees? I suppose I could google
it.
Are you still there? Got another minute? I have another
take on I never thought about it.
The morning after I composed this poem, I had a video
appointment with my cardiologist. At the end of the visit, he said,
"Just be sure to wear a mask whenever you leave the house."
A
couple of days after the call I went outside to set the sprinklers.
From a comfortable distance I watched a neighbor visiting with the
mail man, neither of whom wore a mask. After he got his mail he came
over to see what I was wearing around my neck and we visited. A few
minutes later as I was making my way to the backyard sprinklers, I
met another neighbor, who also was not wearing his mask, getting his
mail and we visited for a few minutes in my driveway. I finished my
work with the sprinklers and came inside. That evening my wife asked,
"Why weren't you wearing your mask?"
My
answer? I never thought about it.
All this in the midst of the Covid19 virus pandemic.
Think about it. I certainly will, from now on.
Be
smart, stay safe
Max
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