I breathed in the hot dust of our country lives, reveled in the coolness of the damp and moldy leaf carpeted woods. Only the wind, whipping by as I tried to outrun it on my motorcycle, or the greatest of kisses - only those could steal my breath away. Holding the longest long note, marching across halftime, playing and moving and playing until bright stars came into my vision and I had to concede to breathe for a split second before doing it again. These were challenges worthy of my bottomless breath.
And then I moved away. Away from the clear country air and the bright smells of cows and corn. Into a collegiate cloud of bar smoke and dumpsters and dryer lint and where did the clean air go? Then I started to wheeze. And to cough and to sneeze. My mom said "hay fever." But when the fevers came the doctor said bronchitis. I endured endlessly sick lungs for months, was never the same again.
Then the things I loved were just a little bit harder. Not noticeable, nothing to force a conscious evaluation. It creeped insidiously into my life, forced me to adjust without admitting to the adjustment. But I didn't hold the notes quite as long, or wait for quite as many measures for the next breath.
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So it got worse. And my health declined, and the weight piled on, and then the allergies came. Slowly at first, gradually, until I was living every day in a sneezy, itchy, Kleenex hell.
Now I wake every day to ask: can I breath today? How bad is it? Just a little stuffy - I can bike, I can run. Breathing through my nose? Better get into the water while it lasts. Swimming! How I've always loved to be in the water. I never would have guessed, turning underwater somersaults as a child, that my biggest aquatic challenge would become the simple act of exhaling through my nose.
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When we cease to breathe we cease to live; this is both biological fact and existential nightmare. My dwindling breath was stealing my life away, one joy at a time. But no longer. It's not a battle I can win; but it is an endurable seige. As long as I can maintain my defenses I can keep doing the things I have come to love. Like swimming. And biking. And running.
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So, pass the Kleenex. I've races to train for.
4 comments:
It's a sin what we've done to our cities. I grew up rural as well...no street lights, no fumes, no big trucks. We had the ocean in my back yard...we jumped ice pans, played with squid, and tortured jelly fish when my mother wasn't looking...now it's an oil slick and not an animal in sight. I don't have allergies...or as my Husband calls them...normal-gies but I imagine you must surely suffer. And yet SUVs continue to sell like crazy...go figure.
We have a WRITER in our midst! Look world, we have a WRITER! (I'm so proud) :)
Thanks (*blush*). Pretty shameful it took me almost two months of drek to post something decent, huh? When I'm pulling my hair out trying to write for my clients the time I have to spend crafting decent personal stuff is the first to go. I haven't touched my novel in like six months!
Don't feel too bad, I'm a painter who hasn't painted in a year. I need inspiration... I'm glad you found yours!
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