Back to Jiu-jitsu

Body: “What the hell are you doing?”

Mind: “Just shut up and roll.”

Body: “Yah, I kinda remember doing that… but… body won’t go that way anymore… out of breath… ”

Mind: “Remember that move we used to do from this position that totally pwned?”

Body: “Shut up… I hate you.”

Mind: “That choke, you know! I mean, I don’t remember all of the details of the move , but it was pretty cool”

Body: “I’m not speaking to you anymore.”

Mind: “You better get used to it. We’re doing this every few days again, unless you get yourself hurt again.”

Body: “Well, this does beat going over waterfalls and getting smashed up on rocks. You’re a moron by the way.”

Mind: “Just do your job.”

Body: “Yeah, well, you do yours. I hate crutches.”

Mind: “You’re the one that got our ankle caught on the rope and twisted our knee.”

Body: “You’re the one who thinks doing dangerous stuff is fun.”

Mind: “We’re going to have to work on this whole harmony thing. You loved jiu-jitsu before you go hurt.”

Body: “After months and months of punishment, yeah, I started to enjoy it. How long do you think until we get back there?”

Mind: “I don’t know. Don’t worry. It’ll come back.”

Spring Means

spring
Spring means change, but is also means a world of difference depending where in the world you are. When I lived in Maine, Spring had an uncertain start. You weren’t sure which window of warmth was ‘just another thaw’ and which one brought the final beginning. The top crust of the ice and snow would begin to melt. In false starts it refreezes that evening, making all the world a perilous sheet of ice- Winter’s way of giving us his swan song and saying he’d take us with him if he could. Each day is warm enough to chip at the almost perma-frost. The ice becomes a makeshift river, extra slick trickling down into still frozen grounds. Miniature lakes are made, and then finally, for which Mainers name their season, mud envelops the earth. The Spring rains add until the ground can hold no more.

Up north, I’m sure they’re enjoying Mudseason. Spring cleaning is ironic until the water finds some home in the air or beneath the ground.

Here in Southern Massachusetts, Spring is equally moody in her arrival. She brings us a cycle of days: rain, sun, cold, warm, rain, sun, cold… until finally, she decides to settle down for good. One day, when the snow has vanished and the yard is sprouting crocuses, you finally feel it is okay to open the windows.

I don’t like Spring very much, but this window, when I fist open my windows to breathe fresh air after being stuffed into indoors for so long, is my favorite. There is a window of time where the birds are barely beginning to wake up, and only a few may chirp in the morning. Besides the ladybugs who decided to hibernate in the cave of my apartment, the insects and arachnids are still safely skeptical and out of sight. Things are still very still and everything smells slightly of rain. The rivers and waterfalls make the bridges lively places to sit and stare and breathe it in, all coming down.

I feel the urge to walk about at night. Still and silent small towns that are finally enough to keep me warm as I explore my mind and the world. No one is out, not even a stray teen. It’s too early for mosquitoes. Nothing is open. Police are too busy patrolling the roads to take notice. To be the only thing moving…

All the worries of life will stay, but I will grace them with an asterisk* that if I were employed at this moment, I would likely be missing these moments. It doesn’t comfort everything, but it settles me a bit…

…into the season of spring.