the online magazine about life as a creative process

 

The Moonlit Trail

 

by Ray Rasmussen

 

 

     
 

The moonlit trail curves through a strand of scrub oak. A wicker creel slaps at my side, and dried leaves crunch underfoot, as I, proudly carrying my first fishing pole, follow along behind my father.

At the lakeside, I catch minnows with a makeshift net. My father baits the hooks and casts the lines far out into the blue-black stillness. Eagerly I watch the tip of my pole, waiting for a fish to strike, then settle into the silence of the night.

As the years pass that silence grows into a great wall between my father and me. Recently, I heard myself saying to a friend about him, "Not more than 20 words ever passed between us."

Tonight, as I stand beside him, strapped into his hospital bed, consumed by dementia, he ruptures that silence with a rant-against the nurses, his family, and against me, his son.

I think of that night long ago, and the quiet outdoors man who loved fishing. I want to go back to the lakeside, to shake the man and say, "Speak to your son, speak to him before it is too late."

the sound of a splash
ripples shatter
the moon's reflection

 
     
 

 

     
 

Ray Rasmussen is a photographer who lives in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. He spends a good deal of his outdoor time in Canyonlands National Park, Utah and in one of Canada's most remote and untouched provincial parks, Willmore Wilderness just North of Jasper National Park. He writes haiku poetry and its related forms haibun [prose plus haiku]. He is also active in creating haiga [haiku plus images]. In a previous life he was a University Professor. See website.

 
     

 

     
   
     

 

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