When I write, I like to think of this as a thermos. Somehow it knows the temperature. Certain things I write to release, let them cool. Others, to keep them close, forever warmed in my heart. And the words seem to know their role. Without explanation, they do the work. I trust my thermos.
Now some may feel the need to explain the science behind it, but I don’t need to know. Don’t really even want to. I don’t want to explain the life right out of the flower on the side of the road. Nor the strokes of the painting. I just want to trust in the feel of them. Keep them unlocked. Open.
My first thermos was something my brother made in shop class. It was a glass jar packed with styrofoam — quite possibly illegal now, but I thought it was something special. I took it off the basement shelf. It made its way to where all barks of trees adorned with faux flowers, potholders and lanyards strung at camp to sway the homesickness, and any other homespun or school project went to rest, too precious to throw immediately they sat in basement purgatory. Of course I painted that thermos. Big bold stripes to match the flowers on my bicycle basket. It fit perfectly. Had he made two, I could have tested them at the same time, but having just the one, I had to take ice water on my ride one day, and Campbell’s Chicken Noodle soup the next.
Perhaps my memory is kept warmer still than the soup ever was, but I can feel it, the heat of noodles slipping down my throat, perhaps only yards from our house on Vandyke Road, balancing my bike between my legs and drinking on the path of Hugo’s field. I had made my own lunch in summer’s sun. My heart is the wicker basket that carries the thermos that knows somehow, to keep it warm. And I am saved.






















