Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Bliss

Driving to our destination

The car’s deflated tires contour the hilly sand

Stretching ahead of us lays the skinny peninsula

My window rolls down

Air gently sweeps in soft and warm

Like a silk blanket in the wind

My beach-blown wisps come loose

Tickling my cheeks

The car stops

I taste the salt in the air

With both eyes closed

I breathe in deeply

Lifting my face towards the sky

I give in to nature

Letting the serenity sink in through my pores

And run wildly through my veins

Awakening my soul to simple beauty

I slip off my shoes

And feel the cool, fine sand between my toes

I look left

Into the vastness of the ocean

Its waves reach out to me

With each crash of the water

It gets closer and closer

Sucking me in

I look right, towards the dunes

The long grasses mimic the sea

Rippling as the clean are runs through

Ahead of me sits a tall, withered lighthouse

The light reflects in my eyes

I stand still in awe and wonder

Perhaps a sailor looks to this safety beam right now

Towards this symbol of home

This reassuring reminder of life

For each of us it holds different comforts

Yet we are not so different

This sailor and me

Both of us look to this symbol for survival

Could I endure as I am without a refuge such as this?

From the moment we deflate the tires

Structure is forgotten

And we blend in with the flowing beach

The way the waves crash

The way the wind blows

The new shells which appear everyday

And the beauties which stay to be found

The sun starts resting

Sinking from the sky

A magnificent exit

Colors now fill the spaces where the sun once sat

An emulation of my feelings at this moment

No place would I rather be

Than where I stand

1 comment:

  1. This is from junior year. I didn't have many pieces from last year that I really liked, however I love what this poem is about--Nantucket. I didn't have many pieces I liked from last year because our portfolio wasn't a huge deal in my class, and I probably did not put in a great amount of effort unfortunately. Despite my lack of effort and revisions in this poem, I still think that my descriptions developed from the previous year. I attempted making connections that I don't think I would've made, or just didn't make, in my sophomore year. I experimented with making the poem flow like the ocean and the sand and the wind. This is something that I further developed in my senior year with poems and stories I wrote--creating a flow either with repetition or sentence variation. That is an area in which I really grew my junior year; I had the descriptions sophomore year and junior year I feel that I began to connect them more seamlessly and had more fluid pieces.

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