That’s Lake Superior in Marquette, Michigan.
Susan dropped me off at the airport yesterday, I was heading home. She was spending a few more days with her Mom. That’s her shot with an iPhone a few minutes later. This scene. This moment. That you can capture this, with a handheld device and text message it seconds later. Miracle, all of it.
I paused after posting this. Any words after this, would seem to pollute the magnificence of the shot, and her moment.
But I plod on. Briefly.
I look upward at the tall snow banks. The dirty snow. 26° F. The cold wind gusts. The Upper Peninsula in Northern Michigan, in March, is winter anywhere else.
The car ride to the airport, was not unlike the car ride in. Quiet. Heavy. No RTP greeting at the airport, or at home. No beefy hug around his thick torso. His absence was a Weight. He’s Gone.
I drive the town.
And I See.
What he gave to this town, this college. His influence on standing up the Superior Dome, the world’s largest wooden structure of its kind. Or the Berry Events Center. Or the U.S. Olympic Education Center. His dreams realized. His name, not on the structures, but we know, these towering structures know, how they were born and who gave them birth. They now sit stoically, quietly, in Memoriam.
His solitary drives around Presque Isle Park. His favorite restaurant. His Friday afternoon watering hole where he’d sit having a cocktail at the bar. His seat now sits empty.
Yet, he is present, ever present, like a twist on the old Teton Sioux proverb,
He is now history in this town like wind through buffalo grass.
Inspired by Robert Creeley: Will we speak to each other making the grass bend as if a wind were before us, will our way be as graceful, as substantial as the movement of something moving so gently. We break things into pieces like walls we break ourselves into hearing them fall just to hear it.