Sooner Blue

Mostly politics, a few current events, a squirt of seltzer down yer pants .. a little blog for my rambles and rants.

2012/6/14

How Baseball Saved My Marriage, a poem

@ 06:56 AM (12 months, 9 days ago)

How Baseball Saved My Marriage

One happy hour drink in Orono and now I'm driving up the Penobscot just for kicks, past the bridge to Indian Island, past the just-closed Georgia Pacific plant, tidy yards
of Milford, "Place of a Million Parts" junkyard, the drink still warm in my belly, the strong, true edge of things

glowing with rich clarity in the late summer, late afternoon light. Dylan's tangled up in blue on the radio, dozens of migrating nighthawks flit over fields along the river, crickets shrill in tall grass, window draft tickles my tan shoulders. Later tonight, the Red Sox will win with another Big Papi

walk-off homer that will make me whoop to myself in the car. But for now, I'm moving through Olamon, Passadumkeag, away from the river, into the woods. It's the end of a long day, but there still seems to be plenty of time and road ahead. Something about the light, the beauty of the sky, makes me think I should keep going right on to northern Maine, all the way to Canada. I could just keep driving all night, potato fields
north of Houlton balancing the dark outside my car windows, lights across the St. John beckoning me over the border. I've got a full tank of gas, credit cards in my wallet. I could

drive all the way to Nova Scotia or Prince Edward Island, stay in some quaint inn on a craggy coast, walk low beaches in search of sandpipers heading south from the Arctic.
How far north do roads go? But it grows late, shadows deepen, and so far from home, I realize I don't know the station

broadcasting tonight's game. So it's finally baseball that curbs my sudden wanderlust. It's the simple pleasure of a good game coming up that makes me turn around to re-enter the bubble of radio reception, to start the long drive back to everything familiar and well-loved.

"How Baseball Saved My Marriage" by Kristen Lindquist, from Transportation. © Megunti Cook Press, 2011. Reprinted with permission.