5.9 miles
bottom of franklin hill and back
70 degrees / humidity: 95%
8:45 am
Back to warmer, more humid, mornings. Did my new regular routine with this route: run just beyond the bottom of the franklin hill, turn around, walk up the hill, put on a playlist, begin running again, much faster, at the top.
I don’t remember what I thought about as I ran. I started noticing my breathing pattern: 1 2 3 4 breathe. Then near the top of Franklin, I started chanting, 54321/54321/54321/123. And then, I changed the rhythm slightly and came up with words:
Here I go down the hill
Here I go down the hill
Here I go down the hill
Watch me fly.
To remember it, I decided to pull out my phone and recite it mid-flight down the hill:
10 Things I Remember From My Run
- Reaching the bottom of the hill, the water was flat and still. No rowers or waves.
- I startled a squirrel as I ran by their hiding place in the brush.
- A group of women — I didn’t see them, only heard their voices — climbing the stone steps by the trestle.
- A unicycle biking up the steep Franklin hill! I noticed them after the turn-off to go above, so they might have only started there, but I like to imagined this biker biked all the way from the bottom on a unicycle. What a feat!
- That same unicycle encountering a skateboarder heading down the hill.
- A sewer smell, coming up from the ravine.
- Sweat dripping off of my face in big drops.
- The buzz of cicadas, the hum of the traffic on the I-94 bridge and the river road
- Saying Good morning! in my head to the Welcoming Oaks and out loud to an older jogger.
- Noticing the goldenrod lining the path as I walked up the hill.
Speaking of goldenrod, as I noticed the golden flowers on the edge of the trail and wondered if they were goldenrod or something else, I remembered Maggie Smith’s poem “Goldenrod” and decided I should memorize it. I also thought about Robin Wall Kimmerer and her chapter on Asters and Goldenrod.
Goldenrod/ Maggie Smith
I’m no botanist. If you’re the color of sulfur
and growing at the roadside, you’re goldenrod.
You don’t care what I call you, whatever
you were born as. You don’t know your own name.
But driving near Peoria, the sky pink-orange,
the sun bobbing at the horizon, I see everything
is what it is, exactly, in spite of the words I use:
black cows, barns falling in on themselves, you.
Dear flowers born with a highway view,
forgive me if I’ve mistaken you. Goldenrod,
whatever your name is, you are with your own kind.
Look–the meadow is a mirror, full of you,
your reflection repeating. Whatever you are,
I see you, wild yellow, and I would let you name me.