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Myriad Miles Down the Roadway (Returning To Dad’s Alma Mater)
Myriad Miles Down the Roadway (Returning To Dad’s Alma Mater)
Flat roadways stretch endlessly
across the campestral countryside
of memory-rich Ohio, sparsely lined on
both sides by dilapidated barnyards,
Mennonite-owned, past-preserving plots,
and fifty-year-old homes whose histories
are etched into peeling walls; whose
door-knobs are imprinted with
fingerprints of previous inhabitants.
The same white-dashed grey road
extends as far as eyes see and
intellect discerns, stretching on the back-
wards and forwards in perpetuity;
only the perfunctory mile-markers, ticks of
time, ever change. Memories are dents in
the pavement, lasting marks remembered as
vast, irreparable potholes but, when revisited,
found to be only visible to the passengers of
the car that struck asphalt and created them.
Exiting the interstate onto a once-warm, now
Shade-draped small town and campus, he
recommences his dance with the spirit
of the school. But in his arms its lifelessness i
is felt: the robust figure he once embraced
has since atrophied to a meek caricature
of itself. Swarms of curiosity-rich, lawn-sitting
students are dispersed. The remaining is only the
occasional blip— a trio ambling by,
without the energy to sit on
and warm the starved grass.
Staring back at him are the same
buildings, his memories, albeit faded,
still carved into their facades; yet somehow
the whole sight is distorted. Before he lies
the image he’s tattooed on the backs
of his eyelids, but it's incomplete, drained
of life. Grassy quads are still torn up
by his once-smooth, fidgeting hands as he
sat in talking circles, basking in the warmth
of humanity; but their greenness has given
way to tawny yellow; their buzz and chatter
to utter silence; their sunny warmth to icy shade.
Returning to where the sun once shone,
the memories etched into walls have dulled
to barely discernible engravings; the
thumbprint-impressions are as insignificant
as mile-markers to the few supple hands
who now grip doors and dig fingernails
into walls, carving themselves into plaster
and impressing indelible but invisible
fingerprints into doorknobs, prints
imperceptible to hands from before
and after, only to be wistfully
recognized by some age-dried hand
myriad miles down the roadway.
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spent this past spring break traveling to tour my dad's alma mater, as my sister and I are considering it for college; this poem is me trying to capture the moments I spent watching him remember it as jumping with energized, passionate students and see it near-empty in the midst of the pandemic and because of a dip in the school's perception