Eventually, I got over my fear of water. But I miss it. Now
I'm afraid of bigger things... like confrontation, or loss of senses.
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Water
There was once a time when I was deathly afraid of water. Lake water,
particularly. The dark depth of it, the squish of the shallow beds, the
squirming, slithering creatures I couldn't see. I remember when
Madeline and I were just old enough to take the old canoe out to the
peninsula on our own. We'd wake with the sun, throw the sheets off our
bare legs, pack a lunch of pickles and string cheese, steal our sisters'
sunglasses and dark tanning oil, and slip quietly off into the water.
Our canoe, filled with innocence and penny toads, muddy bare feet and
summery secrets, collided with the peninsula's shore. Madeline would
peel of all of her clothes down to her swim suit and jump out, tying our
vessel to an unexpecting tree branch. She'd plunge her toes deep into
the muck, and search around to find skipping stones. I stayed in the
canoe, leaning over the edge, running my fingertips along the top of a
body of my biggest fear. I kept myself busy braiding my bleached hair
into tiny braids, organizing the shells Madeline tossed in by size,
color, magical capability. She'd splash me, throw seaweed at me,
squeeze her nose and make me count how many seconds she could hold her
breath underwater. I squirmed when she'd catch tadpoles and hold them in
the pool her cupped hands made, jumped back when she'd hold a crawdaddy
between her fingers.
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