Leaping Lizards

It’s sunset and we’re on the lanai watching geckos take the leap.

The Bohemian and I have slowed down enough to notice. This parade of little lizards, sticky-toeing their way from the rooftop to the edge. Because of lighting, their delicate three-inch bodies are only shadows through the clear, corrugated overhang stretching out above us.

We see the front two feet grip while a gecko head peers over the side, poised to make a four-foot jump to the puakenikeni tree below.

At first, we are uncertain.

“It looks like that gecko’s going to jump…”

“Nah…”

“Oh, yeah, I think so,” says the Bohemian.

Birds chirp. The sun slips lower. We watch the gecko, its head peeking over, moving slightly side to side. Then, just like that – airborne. One small, free-falling body drops through the air, landing on an open leaf in the tree below.

“No way!”

What ensues is a procession of geckos, one after another, inching up to the edge and then dropping. Some hardly hesitate, just leap. Others linger at length. One creative soul approaches the rim upside down, then launches with a twist and lands it.

For creatures known to have an adhesive grip, the Bohemian and I are privy to witness them in complete let-go. No feathers here, their mid-air hurls seem to go against everything we know about their nature.

We humans aren’t much different. We all teeter on the edge of something. Life gives opportunities to face fears. To test the waters of the unfamiliar. We decide how far to leap.

And who knows. We may think we’re all just gecko-toed, wall climbers. But really, maybe we can fly.

photo courtesy of JC+A
photo courtesy of JC+A

The Thick Sound of Nothing

I think
it was so quiet
that the thick
sound
of nothing
woke me

that sleeping room
filled
with silence
stillness
so empty
it was heavy
a velvet blanket
enfolding all
in hush

my chitter thoughts
tested
ears searched the chasm
there must
be
just a trace
of sound

but no
and yes
there was
nothing
spread thick
like a salve
pure pause
enveloped
suspended
me
in silence

really
there was no sound
but for my
bewildered
mind
teetering
so close
to being
soothed
by nothing

photo courtesy of Robert Cudmore
photo courtesy of Robert Cudmore

Fresh Eyes

As our week-long vacation together comes to a close, I ask Jeb if he’d be open to us having a little dialogue to be published here on the Archives.  I’m curious to have his nine-year old perspective recorded and shared.

But as is the way with many ideas brought to children by adults, it’s mine, not his.  And he’s just not into it.  No use in trying to convince him.  Otherwise, the intent of trying to get his authentic viewpoint is lost.

But he has been taking pictures.  And on more than one occasion he has suggested that I “post it on your blog, mom.”

Here are some of my favorites from the Jeb summertime files.

2013-07-19J_lilikoi
photo by Jeb ~ all rights reserved
photo by Jeb ~ all rights reserved
photo by Jeb ~ all rights reserved
photo by Jeb ~ all rights reserved
photo by Jeb ~ all rights reserved
photo by Jeb ~ all rights reserved
photo by Jeb ~ all rights reserved
2013-017-19J_mom
photo by Jeb ~ all rights reserved
photo by Jeb ~ all rights reserved
photo by Jeb ~ all rights reserved
photo by Jeb ~ all rights reserved
photo by Jeb ~ all rights reserved