As I walk down my street I notice the smell of pizza. I think maybe someone is cooking with garlic somewhere. Yet the smell lingers all the way down to the corner and hangs in the air like some distant memory from childhood. I am reminded of the beach for some reason. With the smells of fried food and ocean salt and suntan lotion. Certainly there’s a sunset that belongs in this scene as well. The kind that post cards are made of, but the though vanishes quickly as I my eyes study an interesting pile of trash that one of the neighbors has left. Broken shelves, old pictures, VHS tapes and twisted metal things. Normally I would stop and take a closer look but today’s journey is exercise.
By the time I get to the corner I decide I am ready to start running. My knees hurt. I stop and walk again. My head is cloudy but I run some more. My head seems loose as it bounces with each thumping stride. The whole street bounces in my vision like a bad home movie. My knees still hurt so I stop and stretch them a bit. I notice I haven’t gone very far at this point.
I walk past the house where the mailbox says Rosie and Ken. Then past the house that used to have a nice garden where some recent sewer-line work has been done. Feeling a little better about my knees I run past the next corner and straight down Spivey lane about ¼ mile. I am breathing hard now and slow to a walk again. Despite the lack of breath I am still not sweating. I walk past the Robinson’s house. Glad that they’re not outside, I break into a run again.
I turn right into the new development. The street has been newly paved and one house is almost finished. The other lots are still just weeds with construction signs stuck into the ground near the curb. Quite boring I think to myself as I walk up the hill to the end of the street. Fortunately the street is short and I turn around in the cul-de-sac and run back down to the main street.
I walk some more, half-heartedly waving to neighborhood cars that pass by. Forcing out a “hello” to the other walkers. I press on with the running and listen to my body ache. I slow to a walk again and look at trash and gardens or whatever catches my eye. I set goals, 5 mailboxes running, and then walk again. Run to the corner and walk again. I see a man with a green lawnmower. Must be a “Lawn-Boy” model I guess from my distance. As I get closer the noise confirms my suspicion, Lawn-Boy 21” same model as mine. The smell of the cut grass and the engine fumes remind me of my own yard as well. I walk past his house and break into a run again. My head seems less cloudy now; the road not so bouncy and my knees feel good enough to keep going the whole length of his street.
How is it I wonder, that I’ve come to know this man’s lawnmower better than the man himself?
By the time I get to the corner I decide I am ready to start running. My knees hurt. I stop and walk again. My head is cloudy but I run some more. My head seems loose as it bounces with each thumping stride. The whole street bounces in my vision like a bad home movie. My knees still hurt so I stop and stretch them a bit. I notice I haven’t gone very far at this point.
I walk past the house where the mailbox says Rosie and Ken. Then past the house that used to have a nice garden where some recent sewer-line work has been done. Feeling a little better about my knees I run past the next corner and straight down Spivey lane about ¼ mile. I am breathing hard now and slow to a walk again. Despite the lack of breath I am still not sweating. I walk past the Robinson’s house. Glad that they’re not outside, I break into a run again.
I turn right into the new development. The street has been newly paved and one house is almost finished. The other lots are still just weeds with construction signs stuck into the ground near the curb. Quite boring I think to myself as I walk up the hill to the end of the street. Fortunately the street is short and I turn around in the cul-de-sac and run back down to the main street.
I walk some more, half-heartedly waving to neighborhood cars that pass by. Forcing out a “hello” to the other walkers. I press on with the running and listen to my body ache. I slow to a walk again and look at trash and gardens or whatever catches my eye. I set goals, 5 mailboxes running, and then walk again. Run to the corner and walk again. I see a man with a green lawnmower. Must be a “Lawn-Boy” model I guess from my distance. As I get closer the noise confirms my suspicion, Lawn-Boy 21” same model as mine. The smell of the cut grass and the engine fumes remind me of my own yard as well. I walk past his house and break into a run again. My head seems less cloudy now; the road not so bouncy and my knees feel good enough to keep going the whole length of his street.
How is it I wonder, that I’ve come to know this man’s lawnmower better than the man himself?
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