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Late Summer After a Panic Attack
What if I want to go devil instead? Bow
From Ada Limon’s “ Late Summer After a Panic Attack“
down to the madness that makes me. Drone
of the neighbor’s mowing, a red mailbox flag
erected, a dog bark from three houses over,
and this is what a day is.
Quieting the buzz and hum. Celebrating the bees as they gather pollen. Smelling the just mown grass in the meadow while my feet throb from walking too much or too little. Hovering above the daisy just high enough to know its beauty. Visiting the peaches and watching them ripen in perfect time. I long for perfect time.
Late summer panic is its own affliction. Not quite alive but not quite dead. Noticing it all but somehow blind. Just about to start but ready to quit just the same. Thinking quietly while screaming into the heat. Longing for something more than sadness and anger. I am too hot for this world. This summer has been a lot. Losses of all sorts. Grief oozes through desperate grasps at hope and freedom. I know I am the one I wait for, but I just want to binge watch my shows and eat sushi. I know service is the answer to despair, but my head hurts when I think about all the sickness and guns and hate around.
Hope, the kind of hope with muscles and courage, is my next stop on my late summer train. Late summer speaks of storms that quickly pass, of time slow enough to count things like blessings and ripe tomatoes, of nights long enough to get a good night sleep. Late summer speaks of counting the days till fall, and hoping fall falls gently. Late summer speaks of quenched thirsts and magical sunshine and dreams in our hand’s palm.
About Katie
Born in Louisville. Live in Atlanta. Curious by nature. Researcher by education. Writer by practice. Grateful heart by desire.
Buy the Book!
The Stage Is On Fire, a memoir about hope and change, reasons for voyaging, and dreams burning down can be purchased on Amazon.