bike: 8.5 miles
lake nokomis and back
66 (to lake) / 69 (from lake) degrees
Hooray for new tires! The dappled sunlight was a little disorienting, but otherwise I could mostly see. There was something I wanted to remember about the bike ride but I had to take a few hours break before writing this and now I can’t remember what it was. Oh well. Encountered other bikers, walkers, runners, strollers, and one surrey.
swim: 2 loops (8 mini beach loops)
lake nokomis main beach
67 degrees
An excellent swim! Even with the wind and the cooler air temperature it was great. For most of the swim, I had the lake to myself. It was a little choppy and overcast. How wonderful it is to be able to bike to the lake and swim. No having to wait for someone to give me a ride. No worries about finding a free lane or making sure (and not being able to tell if) a lane isn’t occupied or needing to share a lane with two other swimmers. Free open water.
The rain yesterday must have stirred up the water. When I put my head underwater I could see particles suspended in front of me. I didn’t see any fish but after I was done I heard some kids calling out to someone on shore, the fish are chasing us!!
I counted my strokes from the far right buoy to the far right one: 130. I counted by fours. I counted my strokes from the far left buoy to the far right one: 120, counting by 5s. I like swimming every 5 better, but I like counting by every 4 better.
wordle challenge
5 tries:
round
cubic
fumes
pulse
GUEST
A Primer of the Daily Round/ Howard Nemerov
A peels an apple, while B kneels to God,
C telephones to D, who has a hand
On E’s knee, F coughs, G turns up the sod
For H’s grave, I do not understand
But J is bringing one clay pigeon down
While K brings down a nightstick on L’s head,
And M takes mustard, N drives to town,
O goes to bed with P, and Q drops dead,
R lies to S, but happens to be heard
By T, who tells U not to fire V
For having to give W the word
That X is now deceiving Y with Z,
Who happens, just now to remember A
Peeling an apple somewhere far away.
Left-handed Sugar/ Jane Hirshfield
In nature, molecules are chiral—they turn in one direction or the other. Naturally then, someone wondered: might sugar, built to mirror itself, be sweet, but pass through the body unnoticed? A dieters’ gold mine. I don’t know why the experiment failed, or how. I think of the loneliness of that man-made substance, like a ghost in a ‘50s movie you could pass your hand through, or some suitor always rejected despite the sparkle of his cubic zirconia ring. Yet this sugar is real, and somewhere exists. It looks for a left-handed tongue.
new word: chiral — mirrors but can’t be super-imposed
from The Enkindled Spring/ D.H. Lawrence
This spring as it comes bursts up in bonfires green,
Wild puffing of emerald trees, and flame-filled bushes,
Thorn-blossom lifting in wreaths of smoke between
Where the wood fumes up and the watery, flickering rushes.
Repulsive Theory / Kay Ryan
Little has been made
of the soft, skirting action
of magnets reversed,
while much has been
made of attraction.
But is it not this pillowy
principle of repulsion
that produces the
doily edges of oceans
or the arabesques of thought?
And do these cutout coasts
and incurved rhetorical beaches
not baffle the onslaught
of the sea or objectionable people
and give private life
what small protection it’s got?
Praise then the oiled motions
of avoidance, the pearly
convolutions of all that
slides off or takes a
wide berth; praise every
eddying vacancy of Earth,
all the dimpled depths
of pooling space, the whole
swirl set up by fending-off—
extending far beyond the personal,
I’m convinced—
immense and good
in a cosmological sense:
unpressing us against
each other, lending
the necessary never
to never-ending.
Passage / Barbara Guest
for John Coltrane
Words
after all
are syllables just
and you put them
in their place
notes
sounds
a painter using his stroke
so the spot
where the article
an umbrella
a knife
we could find
in its most intricate
hiding
slashed as it was with color
called “being”
or even “it”
Expressions
For the moment just
when the syllables
out of their webs float
We were just
beginning to hear
like a crane hoisted into
the fine thin air
that had a little ache (or soft crackle)
golden staffed edge of
quick Mercury
the scale runner
Envoi
C’est juste
your umbrella colorings
dense as telephone
voice
humming down the line
polyphonic
Red plumaged birds
not so natural
complicated wings
French!
Sweet difficult passages
on your throats
there just there
caterpillar edging
to moth
Midnight
I’d like to think more about Guest’s use of just in this poem. I like the word just. As a teenager, whenever I called my best friend and her mom answered I’d say something like, this is just Sara. I remember her calling me Just Sara.
swim: 1 small loop (1/2 big loop)
cedar lake open swim
78 degrees
Swam with FWA at open swim. Cold getting into the water, then cold in every part of the body outside of the water. Brrr.
10 Things
- a gentle rocking from the small waves — I liked it, FWA did not
- a big bird — a goose? a crane? high up in the sky above the water
- lots of pot smells at the far beach — a huge whiff wafted our way when the wind shifted
- the far buoy was much farther to the right than it usually is — I think it drifted in the wind
- creepy, pale vegetation growing up from the bottom
- “swam” through a thick patch of vegetation — very difficult to get in a full stroke or to move
- the grating, sharp, piercing noise of 2 rocks being knocked into each other under water — Above water the sound was annoying, but not too bad. Sticking my head below water, it was almost unbearably irritating
- splashing and flicking water like I used to as a kid with FWA
- the haunting call of the mourning dove as we walked back to the car
- something shining through the break in the trees on the other side of the lake — what was it?