Detour

for Dawn Thompson

There is only one rule
of any real value
and it is this:

That one must first
demonstrate mastery
of a rule before one
may earn the right
to break it.

I was never one for being
slavishly devoted to rules.

So when the detour signs
drove me toward the golf course
my curiosity got the better of me.
I already knew that route.
The road ahead was more intriguing.
Where did Satterly go?
And of what use is a detour
if it only takes you exactly
where you intended to end up
anyway?

So I kept going straight
and I came to a tee…
but not that kind,
of course.
Or that kind.

The east fork seemed best.
I was rewarded with a stop sign.
And another tee.
That seemed about par
for the day.

Opposite me the sign said
Thompson Road.
That also figured.
The sign below read largely
FRESH EGGS.
Yep.

A ways to my right I saw another sign:
FRESH FISH.
I have a hunch that I know
where Friday night’s dinner came from.

It seems that no matter where I go
I am always on the right road.

The realm of life is not
a matter of Google Maps and
reliably estimated driving times.

It is not a list of tasks to be
accomplished one at a time
by the end of the day.

It is an unpredictable adventure
of moments stolen and found
of grafittied hearts in a river’s midst
of cormorants preening in the sun
of plant profiles mingled with martyr’s tales
during a roadside walk
of Waldo, located quite finally
in a Mount Vernon dumpster.

It is the open road traveled
with an open mind
and open eyes.

Something whimsically
mysterious.

This entry was posted in Other, Poetry. Bookmark the permalink.

One Response to Detour

  1. Bonnie and Don stevens says:

    Hmmm, I like this one and am trying to see into it, or through it. 🙂

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