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Crumble

These mountains

rub my nose into smallness,

fill my belly with clinging

as I crawl on their slopes

seized by fear and shame.

 

The chairlift was fine;

I do not feel comfortable

high on a string

but could catch the glory there,

see the ways of cedar and snow,

the long quiet conversation.

 

There was skittering

on my first descents,

an awkwardness of new

like any fawn

ungainly and wondering

but not afraid to fall,

the heavy snow a pillow.

 

A patient teacher

taught me well

and saw that I could turn

and breathe

and find the echo of dancing.

 

But then the slope looked steep,

the vision of it in my head

not matching the reality

of toddlers and elders there

but issuing a private menace,

not a clear message

except to my sweating limbs,

my terrified heart,

my arms that flailed to brake

and legs begging to hold back.

 

And mind lost its grip,

at least the kind of mind

that soothes and moves forward;

the frozen mind blasted fear

into my muscles

falling over and over

into hopelessness.

 

I took off my skis

in a swelling of sadness

and walked in deep snow,

feeling the false safety.

 

And where the mountain

seemed softer

I skied a little more,

a poignancy of smallness

while others zipped past.

 

You meet yourself on mountains

and we are not all heroes;

even when we see

how heroes put themselves aside,

sometimes we crumble.

Published inPoems