Archive for the ‘White Rock’ Category

By [Brown & White] Stripes We Are Healed

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Over the past month, I’ve been running at least six out of seven days of the week, and have found it very rewarding on a number of levels.  For the better part of my existence, physical exercise has been a pillar among my disciplines (of course I don’t think it can be called that in the years before eighteen).

Today was like any other.  I found my running shorts (which I hope none of my friends should ever have to see) a tanktop, and those running shoes which are so graciously buoyant on a great variety of surfaces.

After suiting up, I set out for Westshore Drive — which ultimately leads past a few stop signs to White Rock Road and then Lawther — the famous road which circles White Rock Lake and plays host to some of the most expensive homes in Dallas.  But of course that’s not the matter.

Just beneath the willow tree I began my run on towards the spillway, which, indifferent to my changing and growing person remains as constant as I remember it in the late winter months of 2007.

My strides are becoming more confident, my breathing more consistent, and my resilience ever-increasing. Since I don’t run with my head between an iPod, I’ve developed in the past three years all sorts of little games to keep me occupied while my mind explores things deeper, systematizing what might and leaving afloat what shouldn’t.

The most common among these includes one aural — namely on the sometimes symmetrical connection between breathing and steps taking, and I think this particular game will perhaps never be loosed if only for the short-term focus it provides.  (Another which involves the specific numbering of steps between each division of the concrete barrier above the spillway is a less-practiced type, but no less helpful to the fulfillment of specific goals.)

Recently, a few rowing teams from a few select private schools have been paddling and pacing along the side of the spillway during my afternoon runs, and on top of my once-established rhythms of breathing and counting steps has been superceded by a race with those in the water.  Much of why I’m able to keep up or even consider it a race is that they are a bit far off and the distance provides the illusion that our speed is comparable, though I know theirs is much greater.

It’s 100º today, and I’ve mustered the courage to continue in the discipline regardless of the heat (while taking special measures towards to find the equilibriums among hydration and rest.  Of course I shower more often too, but that’s beside the point, I think).

Each lap on the top of the spillway is somewhere between 3/10 of a mile and 1/3 of a mile, and so I usually round up in this regard, which essentially means I allow myself to believe 3/10 is an equal portion to 1/3.  I’m able to justify such an allocation due to the fact that the wind is at my back on the first lap of each round and blowing fiercely at my front the second lap of each.

Finishing sweaty and not a little red from the Texas sun, I walk through the only place in the path around White Rock Lake that seems a maze, and carry on up the hill, where my car is parked in the grass, perhaps too close to the fire hydrant.  Of course any rules I’d be breaking would never be enforced by the security guard on duty who is mostly concerned with guarding his own air-conditioned comfort.

The drive back is about 4 minutes.  I’ll usually reward myself after a long run — and especially as we come deeper into the summer heat — with some sort of chilled drink on the trip home.  Ultimately I’ll return to Vickery some 45 minutes after I originally left, covered in saltsweat and a certain sense of accomplishment.  The first thing I do when I step into my apartment is make an effort to reach the shower.

Trying to remove the layer covering my torso, each day I recall that the very thing which makes the removal of the piece from my body so urgent is the very thing which keeps it still so fastened and snug.

Windbent & and the Firefly Moon

Sunday, June 7th, 2009

I sat in a parking lot, or at least it was a lot of sorts, perhaps it was my act of parking which appended the parking’s to lot, trees hung and swung green or grey, but either way, I spoke with my mother about my father and his surfboard, about my brother-in-law about his tuba, about my sister and her care, about my mother and her finches and her knitting, [Staralfur song in the parking lot and an overture of sorts to two years past], weddings and travels, baking on lakes and thinking of it. You’d never call it stalling — you might say it’s what’s afternoon or a Sabbath if liberal with the language, but I was stalling, stalling and couldn’t circle this neighborhood or really any neighborhood more times. Not because of a fuel shortage! I’d only gone Mile 46 to Mile 68. Mom and I carried on a bit, she was on her way to I can’t right now remember where, and my dad and I were sorting through birthdate plans of Rangers Games and other things no less careful of my childhood.  I started up my car, pushed the song to Ára Bátur, (which sounds like not much else besides a summer drive back from a remote lake location), made Mile 68 Mile 70, and this is how it was required.

Thread the Light

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Couldn’t sprint fast enough to duck beneath a setting moon [chalk white and hanging hard], strewn out and laid long in billions of ripples across a purple lake. Sat down, not the first time either of us or together us have done this. Exchange, relief, tear, and a little league jersey moist in morning’s dew, a begin bookend, left side of the shelf; dust, scent of an aging book of letters compiled during the War.

Some weekend’s worth-of-work later, I escaped finally, the Right bookend to descend into a rest on patio by a pit of fire, in came the dandelion dust with what was at best the warm we wished in Winter’s deepest.  So a sneeze then carry on, a knitting, some weaving together in love later. Seems a mini-mexican drinks make malleable the callous – might moisturize the cracks; should stir up the stolid, Really reveal the Hidden, and conjure up consciousness forms deep below some seen skin and the hardly heard. Could it be that I can’t remember what is most real or that I choose to remember what I wish wasn’t?  Surely there’s a movie to match this (meaning I am sure. Maybe).  This may be the best way to know what it is to be made man.

Spillwayed + Docklayed

Friday, May 15th, 2009

I’ve found my summer skin. In Texas we tend to spend the first few days disappointed in the stickyhot and allergy swells, but when comes the contrast of peeling pink shoulderbones and its hard brown freckles, well, really no-thing is left for complaining.

Returning to my summers’ prior running discipline, I spend an hour a day just above the sleepest slope I know in Dallas — a concrete path equal in height to the top of the deepest forest I know in Dallas.

It’s a network of sunset-lit trails and paths leading to places yet unseen. There’s nothing esoteric about any of this writing.  I’ve just recently discovered this area after a multiplicity of years jogging and an occasional karoking on the concrete-laid-way above.  And now after only few hours exploring earlier and photographing a band later this afternoon has, well, increased the curiosity to a summit.

White Rock is a place I connect with solitude and with silence, and yet! in the past year it has transformed into something much richer as shared.  What is this year, wonder what next year will, well, see. But a docklay never lets down, it continues to be confirmed.

Someday the Waves

Sunday, April 12th, 2009

Drive thirty-five miles an hour.  It seems a small task, but this sort of thing has been anything but that.  Maybe I ought to shoot for thirty-four.

Surely I can do thirty-four.

I pulled on the gravelway just as the sun was setting.  Grass spilled over and into the driveway so that it was difficult to tell where the gravel ended and the green began.  Some water stood in a puddle about six feet away.  It had rained this Easter morning, and I suppose I was a little disappointed by some ideal-led desire to see a new dawn on the day of New Dawn.

I hopped out of my car and started down the walkway.  This was a walkway I’d passed down no small number of times.

The spillway is a place of great personal meaning especially in terms of my thoughtlife, and it has been quite the assistant to seeking the discipline of Silence and of Slowing — neither of which have I been able to consistently practice well.  Many evenings last summer just as the sun had begun to dip below the horizon, I came here to seek the mind Right and the spirit Renewed. Petition, Pardon, and other sorts of same-Things I began to associate with this place.  Of course I probably will never not.

Carried by my thoughts, the walk was shorter than I’d remember, and soon I’d located my place — the direct center of half-mile-long concrete wall that boundaries White Rock Lake’s rippling current, sending it back into itself, cycling over and over with no sense of intelligible order save the moments it crashes hard onto the green shore, or, forms in ripples aside the current of the wind.

Of course a person can cause some disruption by tossing a stone through the surface, which spins circle upon circle upon circle upon circle until the diameter of each is so large that finally the shimmering black layer of glass smooths out and returns to its random cosmos.

Looking across from the spillway, I watch cars pass along Gaston Avenue — taillights that pierce long red nails of Reflection on the surface — which are quickly eluded by the grandfather oaks far off in the distance.  Though the sun is gone from plain sight at this time of day, it still spills some pink and purple pigment vertically into the western sky, leaving only traces of its power and reminders of the night’s mystery — when we anticipate a time the earth will be turned, the Sun will Rise, and no small thing will be left shrouded.

Some thunder screams in the distance, and not too long after a twig of lightning is thrust into a set of cumulus clouds, igniting them if only for a short bit, like the match that is struck against the flint but fails to ever grow completely into a flame.

A few meters below where my feet hang over the ledge and swing, the wall transforms into a slope, more than splitting in half the 90º angle into some 30º, which more easily transitions the concrete on into the water beneath.  Waves break more softly this way, of course, and during the day turtles and a few ducks may more easily rest on this slope to find the warmth of summer’s sun.  Other than these things, I’m not able to think of other reasons why the concrete would be engineered so, which is another reminder of how little I know.

Slowly, I usher my body down from the wall — down the few meters of steep — and stand on the slope.  It’s not the first time I’d done it, but after all, that was during the day.

I safely made it down, and my feet were positioned at an angle congruent to that of the slope.

Not too long a time had passed when I heard the scuffling of a few people on the walkway above, and a half-lit cigarette soared over my head, landing about 6 feet to the left of where I’m standing, which too is about 6 feet from the breaking of the white-crests on the concrete surface.  I sat down on the ground, and dug my feet into the surface to avoid slipping any, and watched the cigarette’s orange ember roll slowly down towards the water.  When it stopped on a pebble to the left of a weedy undergrowth, I was compelled to stand and to help it finish its journey into the water, where it would finally be extinguished and put to rest.  But I didn’t.

After around an hour of Hearing and Asking and these things, it’d grown a bit colder so close to the surface; it’s always a bit windier here than anywhere else.  It was also a bit more humid here than elsewhere, and my hands had become moist — if not from anxiety, then surely it was the humidity.

+

I sometimes wonder if I’ll ever be a long distance runner.  Maybe it’s that I’m better designed for middle-distance running.  Or powerwalking or something.  Last summer, I’d been disciplined enough to run upwards of six miles a day, here at this very spillway.  Some days were easier than others — for instance if my allergies were attacking or if I hadn’t had six shots of espresso or if my roommate wasn’t there to keep me accountable to my goal — a goal which was simply, run six miles every day.

I found while running a large number of truths about my-self — if not limited to the clarity of mind that such a physical undertaking produces or at least assists.

One simple but very telling piece running brought to light is that longer distances are more difficult when I am thinking about the distance.  I quickly learned that in order to continue in the discipline — to decrease my time each day and eventually reach better Health — then I needed to start focusing on the two foundational items that propelled me on: take a measured step at a time, and breathe.  And do these things well.

The biggest hindrance to my running — and perhaps why I could not keep to the task for however many years — is that I would be so caught up in the entire distance of the run that I would be limited in my ability to focus on the very things that characterized the very act of running — taking measured steps, and breathing.  And thereby ignoring (or, at worst, managing) the anxiety of some inability to breathe or to go on with the amount of burn that characterized my calves.

+

I finally climbed back on to the wall where I have sat so many evenings (and upon which I’d set this very one), spun my body around at the top to face away from the lake, preparing to follow the long path up a hill and around the curve where my car silently rested.  The friction grinded my jeans, and offered some temporary heat beneath my thighs.

As I started on the path, I found myself walking very quickly, thinking about the distance ahead.  Looking at the Dallas Utilities Plant off in the distance.  I forced myself to readjust to a slower pace, which I rarely do, and decided for the next few moments to look down at the ground directly in front of me, and peering up ahead in small doses only to guarantee I wasn’t headed in the wholly wrong direction.

I want to feel like I’m entering a New phase, because I think the promise of growth and of movement would allow me to deal better or understand the immediate past.  But more than anything, it feels like a re-entry into something I’ve already experienced.  It feels strangely like I’ve acquired back something I’d already given up.

+

A watched pot indeed does not boil, and before I knew it I’d reached my car.  I typed 3-4-3-3-5 onto the electronic pad on my driver’s side door, and watched the space beneath my rear-view mirror illuminate.  I stepped in, welcomed by the scent of fresh pipe tobacco, and started the engine.  Driving on down West Lawther a bit, I pulled into a parking lot which accompanied a small marina, and made a U-Turn.

Thirty-four.

Surely I can do thirty-four.