The Bridge

I love. Wouldn't we all like to start
a poem with "I love . . ."? I would.
I mean, I love the fact there are parallel lines
in the word "parallel," love how

words sometimes mirror what they mean.
I love mirrors and that stupid tale
about Narcissus. I suppose
there is some Narcissism in that.

You know, Narcissism, what you
remind me to avoid almost all the time. 
Yeah, I love Narcissism. I do. 
But what I really love is ice cream. 

Remember how I told you
no amount of ice cream can survive
a week in my freezer. You didn't believe me,
did you? No, you didn't. But you know now

how true that is. I love
that you know my Achilles heel
is none other than ice cream—
so chilly, so common.

And I love fountain pens. I mean
I just love them. Cleaning them, 
filling them with ink, fills me
with a kind of joy, even if joy 

is so 1950. I know, no one talks about
joy anymore. It is even more taboo 
than love. And so, of course, I love joy. 
I love the way joy sounds as it exits

your mouth. You know, the word joy.
How joyous is that. It makes me think
of bubbles, chandeliers, dandelions.
I love the way the mind runs

that pathway from bubbles to dandelions.
Yes, I love a lot. And right here,
walking down this street, 
I love the way we make

a bridge, a suspension bridge
—almost as beautiful as the
Golden Gate Bridge—swaying
as we walk hand in hand. 
 

Copyright Credit: C. Dale Young, "The Bridge" from Torn. Copyright © 2011 by C.  Dale Young.  Reprinted by permission of Four Way Books.
Source: Torn (Four Way Books, 2011)