
Just as the world tilts forward, and the sky
is a raw, stretched canvas. I am a photograph
left to develop in a bath of acid.
The yellow line, once a steady guide,
a docile spine, now unravels like a nerve.
My hands, clenched at the wheel,
are two pale animals burrowing for warmth.
Behind me, the familiar landscape shrinks
to a memory, a blurred postcard.
The trees are tall, blurred strokes of umber and pine.
I can’t look back at the place where the ground was level.
I couldn’t if I tried.
The engine sings a low, desperate note,
a vibrato of what’s to come.
I feel the shift in my core,
a weightless atom sliding inside me.
The horizon, once so wide and certain,
is a needle’s eye, a perfect puncture.
And I am a filament, pulled through.
A ghost, a thing with no anchor.
I have unhooked from the known,
the gravity of comfort, the predictable.
The slope is a promise, a steep descent.
And I am letting go.
The sound of it is a single, clean intake of breath.
It is the last moment of stillness
before the fall.
And the air, it is a new kind of cold,
a breeze against my cheek.
The wind rushes past, a sound like paper tearing.
My hair, a dark spill,
flies out behind me,
a banner of surrender.
I am an arrow shot from a bow,
a body moving now with its own terrible will.
The speed is a thrum in my ears,
a low and steady buzzing.
The old world is a coin dropped from my grasp,
spinning and diminishing.
I am moving into the silver,
the bright, unblemished light.
The fall is a freedom,
a kind of cruel grace.
About the Creator
Tim Carmichael
Tim is an Appalachian poet and cookbook author. He writes about rural life, family, and the places he grew up around. His poetry and essays have appeared in Bloodroot and Coal Dust, his latest book.


Comments (3)
Your descriptions were so vivid and I was able to see it all happening in slow motion in my head. Loved your poem!
Very moving, wonderful description that reminds me of the song ‘Radar love’ Once again you have written a worthy entry
Very descriptive and edge of seat ride.