
The River
I haven’t smoked in more than 15 years
though some days, suddenly…
I stop, wish for a drag,
that first catch of smoke in my lungs
and the rising hum of nicotine in my blood
that brought words cascading from my brain.
At 64, I’ve begun to miss those mornings,
wearing my grandmother’s pale blue bathrobe
in the smoke saturated kitchen,
writing madly
as I tried to navigate my thoughts
and dam up my raging brain.
I wrote so many words then.
Words bounced off other words
the way an unskilled kayaker bounces
off boulders.
Sentence after sentence, plunging
down the page. Blue-black ink showing the
telltale warning V of submerged rocks
among the raging white water.
I prayed the way I used to
paddle. Wildly on a wild river.
Until the water washed over me
and I drowned, again
and again.
I’ve learned my lesson and
keep to calmer waters now.
But still I write to pray
to the gods of that river.
Published on The Laundry Line, 10 February, 2026.




