When I was a child visiting my grandparents for the summer,
my grandmother often insisted that I take an afternoon nap. I detested this
practice because I didn’t need a nap: I was far too busy running through
the cow pasture or swimming in the irrigation ditch or lying under a tree
reading to take a nap. Plus I was far to old to be taking naps!
What was wrong with her?! (I realize now she likely needed a break from me and
the nap was her tactful way of corralling me for at least an hour. And yes, much
to my chagrin, I often fell asleep while lying on my bed, staring at the
ceiling.)
Naps are wasted on the young. I don’t know about you, but there are
many days I’d love to have the simple pleasure of an afternoon nap! Occasionally, I do take one, but I live with pets who have no compunction
about sleeping whenever and wherever they want to. Need proof?
Perhaps we should follow their example and indulge ourselves
in an afternoon nap now and then this summer!
Photo courtesy Ryan McGuire |
Introduction by Ted Kooser: I’m especially fond of sparklers because they were among the very few fireworks we could obtain in Iowa when I was a boy. And also because in 2004 we set off the fire alarm system at the Willard Hotel in Washington by lighting a few to celebrate my inauguration as poet laureate. Here’s Barbara Crooker, of Pennsylvania, also looking back.
Sparklers
We’re writing our names with sizzles of light
to celebrate the fourth. I use the loops of cursive,
make a big B like the sloping hills on the west side
of the lake. The rest, little a, r, one small b,
spit and fizz as they scratch the night. On the side
of the shack where we bought them, a handmade sign:
Trailer Full of Sparkles Ahead, and I imagine crazy
chrysanthemums, wheels of fire, glitter bouncing
off metal walls. Here, we keep tracing in tiny
pyrotechnics the letters we were given at birth,
branding them on the air. And though my mother’s
name has been erased now, I write it, too:
a big swooping I, a hissing s, an a that
sighs
like her last breath, and then I ring
belle, belle, belle in the sulphuric
smoky dark.
American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry
Foundation (www.poetryfoundation.org), publisher
of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the
University of Nebraska, Lincoln. Poem copyright ©2013 by Barbara Crooker from
her most recent book of poems, Gold, Cascade Books, 2013. Poem reprinted by
permission of Barbara Crooker and the publisher. Introduction copyright ©2014
by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction’s author, Ted Kooser, served as
United States Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress
from 2004-2006.
Do you ever have words or phrases pop into your head,
seemingly from nowhere? I do—I had it happen to me this weekend, in fact. I’ve
been working really hard the past couple of weeks, on both writing projects and
around the house, and even though I was happy with what I’d accomplished, I was
feeling a bit tired out. My mother-in-law was coming to spend the night with
us, and I was looking forward to a three-day weekend. But sometimes it’s hard
to switch from all-out work mode to relaxation mode. Fortunately, my
subconscious kicked in with these words:
“This is your one, beautiful life. Enjoy it.”
So instead of fussing and over-working this weekend, I
relaxed with my family. We sat on the lanai and floated in the pool. I made
cinnamon waffles for breakfast and we ate ice cream while watching Independence
Day on TV. Yesterday I slept in until 8 a.m.—almost unheard of because
usually my pets wake me up long before that. Before I did anything, I asked
myself, “What do you feel like doing now?” (Not “What should you be
doing now?” “Should” was banished, at least for the weekend.)
Even though it’s Monday and time to get back to work, I’m
going to continue to hold those words in my heart: “This is your one, beautiful
life. Enjoy it.” Even while I’m cleaning bathrooms, or feeding the dog, or
writing an article. This is my one, beautiful life.
“Experience has taught me that the way to a joyful life is
always fraught with fear, that to find it you must follow your heart’s desires
right through the inevitable terrors that arise to hold you back. If you don’t
do this, your life will be shaped by fear, rather than love, and I guarantee,
the shape will be narrow and tiny compared with your best destiny.”
—Martha Beck, The Joy Diet