
It’s cold.
I’m zigzagging cross town.
I hit red lights and turn to walk up avenues. I approach walk signs, and turn back down streets.
The skyscrapers cradle the wind currents, they gust and swirl, and find the exposed skin: the neckline, the forehead, up the pant leg — both eyes gush water.
I reflect on a conversation from the day before.
“How you feeling?”
“Much better thanks. But I’m a bit shocked at how quickly I tire. And I have these intermittent bouts of lightheadness. Destabilizing, really.”
“You had material blood loss. You know that red blood cells take 4-6 weeks for complete replacement.”
You had no idea. None. Zero. How little interest you take in something so important to your sustenance. Yet that doesn’t seem to rock you as much as knowing the older you get, the less you seem to know. This jolt makes you lightheaded. Or perhaps it’s the speed walking, and a shortage of red blood cells.
I slow down. Way down. The lightheadness grows.
This movie is running in slow motion. Other pedestrians pass you by. Others pass you by. This makes you uncomfortable. You are losing, behind, slipping, slowing. Increasingly you are feeling ok with that. Really? Are You? Not really. You try to accelerate…want to…can’t…don’t…need to.



