"My bad bike karma
began innocuously, with some unimpressive tumbles on breezy, traffic-free residential
side streets. My mom, dad and sister took family bike rides on crisp spring and
hot summer weekends to a semi-secret meadow of honeysuckles and lilacs, even
though everyone in my family was desperately allergic. The blossoms stared at
us all in a row, the entrance to a long field that seemed untouched despite
being the dividing border between two neighborhoods. Sometimes we would walk
our bikes across the field, entering into the alternate universe of the houses
just behind ours, which we could usually only glimpse through the narrow slats
of our backyard fence. (Years later, my mother would break down and excitedly plant
a lilac bush in our very own backyard. I imagine the ashes of my childhood shaggy
dog, Cindy, are still buried there, unbeknownst to new owners.) On the way back
or to the lilacs, I would sometimes end up laid out on the hood of a car or
thrown into a cozy patch of grass at the request of my awkwardly-pedaling
limbs."
Monday, October 22, 2012
tiny excerpts
Because I can't think of anything interesting to write about (save maybe the fact that an entire night spent awake watching TV with a favorite on Friday was confusingly punctuated by a Dusty Rhodes documentary at 9 a.m. -- none of which was interesting), I will post a tiny excerpt from a very rough essay book chapter I'm working on currently (and I hope to finish this at some point this week, along with at least one other thing):
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