Thursday, October 8, 2015

"The River That Flows Two Ways"

Checking the conditions…
Much like the stunning substantiation won by watching a measuring tape stretch deep into the thirties at the fork of a pinched caudal, so was his face.  His eyebrows rose to beam a sense of surprised relief in having heard the assurance of confidence that was my answer reaching from the kitchen, overcoming the chatter of some cable station’s fodder spewing from a flat-panel in the living room.  Yea!  No problem!  Uh huh, I’ll drive ya up.  Let me know when you’re ready. 

Weighing the odds before heading out…
I didn’t plan on concealing the rings of cigarette burns bored through this polyester seat with the wrinkled hems and stitches woven in an airy weave of linen fabric.  More so, the sultry, donated cover of my shorts.  This apparent, driver’s-side derivative born from an instantaneous decision I made with the same swiftness of the New York minute that he used to stuff a change of overnight clothes into a travel bag.  A decision that reinforces in reminding me of the shiny pin of privilege that comes with wearing a word as simple in comprehension and commonplace in everyday expression as friendship.  A word far too easy in the daily rush of life to bruise and abuse, or mutilate with “likes” from a detached, fleshless electronic mirror of reality with the click of a mouse or a fingertip’s swiping tap of an app, or trample and twist between myriad variations of echoing, eggshell-thin utterances of pride.  A word with not only the most innate of understood meaning, but also the hardest of definitions to enact faithfully.  One that we may hammer with a ringing truth and know that its reverberation will sound in a harmonic union of no synonymic substitute.  It is a churning work of creation that we hope will never break in form, like a standing wave moving against the tide, rising from the sea’s surface, a saline salience admired in recognition from afar.  Unique.  And as this, we can only hope to remain fluid if the tides of friendship ever come to slacken, knowing that with patience and the recurrent acceptance of inevitable change, they may again turn to flood one’s memory with new experiences, having fully-ebbed of what is of less importance only to reveal the winding contour of a sweeping past hidden beneath the surface of a deeper understanding.  The antonym of I’m much more comfortable lying here on the couch.  A selfless spontaneity.  Or, an outright overlooked onus of obligation that in this onset of twilight has led me into steering 5100 lbs. of rolling steel and compelling me to stare straight ahead through prescription eyeglasses.  Action, for a just purpose.

The release…
One hauling drive of a cast has crossed into the distant waters of a neighboring state and another made so far that its soaring altitude has descended from the bellies of clouds.  His first hook-up is made only minutes after arriving at the chosen churning-action confluence of 326 W. 40thThe Hotel Four Points by Sheraton.  He makes a clean entry out from the cradling height of the passenger-side door into the vastness of possibility he may find swimming under his feet.  A college roommate he hasn’t seen shimmer in smile for seven years nears closer at his retrieval.  Sidewalk handshakes, shirt-clinching back-slaps, high-rising hoots, and giving’s of gratitude.  Keepers, in one another’s eyes.  Their enthusiasm hints at a favorable night ahead.  A blitz of laughs and tales to be entered in their respective log books. 

Reeling-in allure, snagged of an urban overload…
Eight thirsty, pumping pistons fire from the honed depths of a 5.7L Dodge Hemi power plant, roaring, gurgling, and purring the product of cranking, combusting compression from their rotating and shrieking rubber-to-asphalt torque at the press of my sandal two-thousand shy of  red-line-reaching rpms, belching these throaty sounds within the thinning spill of sunlight disappearing into a swelling sponge of twilight from the trumpet of a cavernous tailpipe, coming to be immediately muffled of any chest-beating masculinity amongst the immutable might that is this cacophonous city’s myriad miles of unclean concrete, her sky-kissing stories of steel, avenues of glimmering glass and spasmodic sea of neon and LED animations looming, winding, flowing, blinking, her multitudes of millions mingling, crosswalks crowding with casts of creeping footsteps, racing dashes, brushing weaves of shoulder, clopping high-heels, long-legged summer-strutting sex appeals, digging headlong honks, my side-view mirror’s half-inch shave, a giving graze of grace, the passing driver’s unconcerned face, Con Ed’s rising streams of steam, sidewalk squalor, the taxicab’s holler, traffic signals allergic to green, returning red, unbuttoned collars and retired ties, the service economy worker’s commencing commute, his computer tomorrow to reboot, flaunting fashionistas flowing on their feet, the epicurean conceiting of a Condé Nast Traveler retreat, jay walkers and street talkers, rumbles of conspire far below the many skyscraper’s spire, gridiron, gridlock, Dutch-laid cobblestone block, a vendor’s sourdough sprinkled salt, a drunk’s breath of ash, rot, and sour-mashed malt, foreign tongues, naïveté, native walkers on the stray, capturing cameras aiming, flashing, uploading, tagging, millions of pixels of a personal pretension, reflective fluorescent-yellow vests, attachés, orange construction nets, hydraulic hammering, pneumatic noise, a bottleneck of sneaking taillight ploys.  A chorus of streets and avenues that could never exist as silence.  A metropolis, missing of melatonin, impossible to coax with sleep.  An island of bedrock, whose arteries of asphalt forever flow, whose capillaries of concrete find the footways to doorsteps distant, whose chiseled shoulders of schist resist against a natal river’s turning of the tide churning at her side.

Underpass…
It’s now 10:49pm on a Tuesday night in June.  The sinking slice of crescent has long crossed over the finish line of the western sky’s horizon leaving me in its moon dust.  I’m forty-miles away from the comforts of routine.  A man, who at this hour, would normally be entangled in a sparing thread-count of cotton, striving to stay awake at the attentive trance of TV’s “reality” coaxing for five-minutes-more of my somniferous stare, curled amongst pillows and a muddled mash of sheets, twisting, slipping-away, passing, sleeping, stalled from movement until the first eye-opening ring of alarm set on my phone awaits to sound within a scant six hours’ time, all before the sun will again sneak skyward to engild the soaring edges and angles of this city’s glass grid, these twinkling towers teeming, glinting of a shining golden-orange shower.    
The city’s crosstown congestion, avenues of intersections plagued by the many over-hanging synchronizations of ill-timed illuminated instruction, yellow yielding to red, direct me at a stop-and-go dash of dashboard-instrument discordance, dials rising and falling, accelerating and braking, revving and idling, last-second crossings over the solid-striped lines of adjacent lanes and standing plastic stanchions between impetuous passageways on W 41st and 8th, those feeding the tiled-tubes of 495 W.  My steed of steel is jostled by the countless canyons carved of rim-punishing asphalt.  Assaults, as if to the hull of a ship by stormy sea, mark the street-winding exodus along an unsightly visage of New York neglect. 
I’ve silenced the truck’s FM radio in favor of the road’s focus.  For my mind’s drifting indulgence at racing ahead, homeward, riding the pushing head wave of the pulling engine’s purrs.  Her sounds.  The bottlenecked traffic building, AC belts squeeking, brake pads shrieking, revving engines roaring and hollow sounding thumps of rubber tires striking.  The muggy nighttime air’s clenching scent, its distinct urban weight, it’s deafening resonance of its cross-breeze percussion gushing through the lowered windows of the cabin is that which is definitively and impurely Mannahatta at her grandest.  It’s late. My eyelids have grown heavy.  I’ve seen enough.  I’ve avoided even more.  I belong, elsewhere.  I’m braking, then revving, braking and revving, avoiding the drawing squeeze of flanking quarter panels and rubber-necking distance of tail lights exploding in the hesitancy of red, inching ever so slowly like a viscous flow of lava as I eventually secure impassable presence in my lane. Then suddenly, I roll in, passing beneath the support of a cobbled archway.
I’m swallowed into a one-way descent of echoing engine noise and the dull drone of rolling traffic to a creeping echelon of pulsing brake-lights.  A wide river’s culvert for the endless underpass of carbon-dioxide and sulfur-emitting combustion.  Nearest mid-point, three-quarters of a mile in, I’m some ninety-seven feet underwater.  Under the tidal Hudson above, below the reflecting glow of a city’s iconic skyline diffusing in the saw-toothed riffles of a river rich in colonial American heritageUnder the dingy curve of soot-covered tile set at the working hands of daring laborers in the mid-nineteen-thirties, a trinity of tunnels whose mouths now connect separate states,  but that four centuries earlier, was pristine forest of the native Lenni-Lenape tribe who inhabited both banks of this river I’m now speeding underneath on a westward course at 45mph.  They named her the Muhheakantuck (pronounced muh-he-kun-ne-tuk) or, “the river that flows two ways,” as was appropriately noticed, having observed how she empties into the welcoming Atlantic’s rising and falling turns of tide. 

A retrieval of thoughts, churning… 
It is that slippery habit of our mind to defect from the present and unfurl a distinct memory from the twisting vortices of time.  For that recollection of something distant, from here, away, from now.  That which is nothing more than the former breaths of our very existence, exchanges of purpose, isolated in moments.  That desire, to unpeel the layer of the present and relive succulent tastes of memory garnered from piths of the past.  To expose the roots of our sunken seeds whose germination has led to an irreversible advancement of growth that can only be touched in the now.  Driving alone in silence has afforded me such a defense.   Junctures in our mind where we strive to tunnel through the impenetrable bedrock of the past, somewhere beneath these flowing passages of time remembered, to return to where we came from someday distant.  A prior rising of the sun, a smile at the sight of a landed fish, a lover’s warm touch and silky invitation waiting at home.  At the innumerable and inestimable.  Those heartbeats that are paid with breath and spirit as the cost of admittance to travel further across and through to where you rest now.  To emerge somewhere new.  To experience the rawness of life in all her grandeur and live amongst its unblinking frankness staring you down with piercing hindsight, if only to recount in our mind’s catacombs of thought, as now.  As if to separate from meaning the essence of tide from the flow of seawaterOnward, elsewhere, always, there exists the former.
The passing of another season has placed two-hundred and twelve days distance since the last moonless night I held the stripes of a Striper outright in my hand.  One admired and then resuscitated with shakes of tail within the placidity of ink-black, frigid mid-November surf.  Away, swam the culmination of an entire season of scales and thousands of casts, at last, those released before stowing away my gear for the dormant duration of yet another long, winter hibernation.  Before accepting the pact of packing, the inevitable trade-off that are stains of salt exchanged for blankets of dust.  Now however, the tide of time has finally changed course.
Since the piercing of this night’s field of starlight above, it has been approximately fifty-days that the genetically-distinct fish of the Hudson River tribe began their annual migration upstream, those tens of thousands of tails instinctively swaying within the harbor-water flowing around the Statue of Liberty’s base to the headwaters of their freshwater breeding grounds near Albany and the Berkshires, one-hundred sixty-something miles from the restless tide’s eddying rip spilling around the sweeping tip of Sandy Hook.  Our celestial orbit has spurred the auspicious beginning of another summer.  One fostering the continuation of a species’ broodM. Saxatilis has again spawned, and thus, we await for her nocturnal redemption.
From the Empire State’s capital city of Albany she will swim downstream, seaward, from whence she came in late-April and early May, and before that her over-wintering grounds off the coast of North Carolina, journeying for over one-hundred miles to pass under the Castleton-Hudson, Rip Van Winkle, Newburgh-Beacon, Tappan Zee, and George Washington, down the Hudson and offshoot of Harlem and East Rivers, past Randall’s and Rikers, below LaGuardia’s runways on the Flushing, Roosevelt Island, foraging the bays of Little Neck, Manhasset, Hempstead, the Long Island Sound, under the shadows and footings of the Williamsburg, Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Verrazano, Governor’s Island, the container ships of New York Bay and the pilot boats of the Narrows, Raritan Bay, Rockaway, Flynns Knoll, some swimming south the one-hundred-twenty miles of sandy Jersey coastline to the reaches of Cape May, even crossing Delaware’s bay, while most sling their caudals past Jones Beach, Great South Bay, Shinnecock’s inlet, Fishers and Shelter Island, Gardiners Bay, the mecca of Montauk, Point Judith’s Light, Block Island Sound, Watch Hill, Rhode Island Sound, Cuttyhunk, Nashawena, Pasque, Naushon, Vineyard and Nantucket Sounds, the flats of Monomy, Chatham, The Great Marsh and The Cape’s great breakers bowing to the towering dunes lining the National Seashore, before finally taking summer residence around the outermost isolation of Cedar Point. All points, everywhere.

Light, at the end of the tunnel
Tonight, perhaps at this particular moment of contemplative thought, she may be crossing above the concrete conduit I am now travelling within, being guided seaward by those eons of inherited instinct and related physical senses of which I could never relate.  Those that encourage her passage through the relative blindness of what I would otherwise consider a pitch-black world, this ancient channel of obsidian-colored darkness whirling above entombed tiled-tubes that invite her to flow forever, elsewhere.  Towards the many tidal undertaking of new beginnings flooding the old and familiar.  Of her epic seasonal migration, that underwater marathon in which she is simply one tail existing apart of the vast unknown.  As the consequence of one man’s fancy from within these buried depths of mud and silt I speed through, there is the promise of a striped-fish in her lean and ravenous, post-spawn form passing atop.  A life-force enduring pilgrimage over the rich memory of a riverbed that prescribes a Striper-superhighway, furthering herself from the metropolitan reaches of Manhattan to venture seaward in a current charmed by the open-ocean.  One that will someday solicit for the fulfillment of her future progeny now resting unhatched as the countless billions of egg-sacks laid upstream.  Her promise of plentitude.  One that with varying degrees of fate and luck and skill and timing, comingled with the lure and wobble of wooden and plastic presentation drawn shorebound, may manifest one night to ordain that our paths cross once again, that they may crash in a splashing connection.  That with each passing minute I may be ever closer to feeling the surge of her tugging pull.  That the darkness of a coming sunset may deliver the silver scales and black stripes of her body, those rising to the surface and emerging from unseen depths to fall anew upon my sight once more.  For the reeling renewal of this surfcaster’s crossing-over towards a season favored by her furtive presence. 
And so tonight, we both pass without confrontation.  Our journeys approaching ever closer to an end that will promise the pursuit of new beginnings.









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