Private Parts, Private Thoughts
Terry comes over for our Tuesday walk.
He bruised his leg pretty bad
going down some rocks on his motorcycle
so we don’t climb any mountains today,
just walk the roads and talk about private parts,
the concept we impose on children
who are born without privacy
until we lay down the law at some point
for their safety, our comfort, society.
Terry was seventeen in Cincinnati,
she was fifteen and curious,
they shed privacy together
for an entire summer.
I remember skinny-dipping
on a sandbar of the Meramec River
in Missouri with friends,
private parts flopping, wet,
the same summer as Woodstock,
I guess it was something in the air at the time,
never expecting fifty-six years later
to be homeowners with SUVs,
old hippies with grandkids,
reminiscing. One of the Meramec girls,
Debbie, died in a car wreck a month after.
I still recall her breasts slick with the river,
upright, untasted.
We each are wearing broad-brim hats,
canvas sombrero for Terry,
funky fedora for me,
and we wonder about the lost custom
of tipping one’s hat to a lady, so we try it,
tipping “Howdy ma’am”
and then simply “Ma’am”
like the laconic cowboys of old movies
as we arrive at the pond in the center of town.
Suddenly we both share a glance,
something in the air. Strip our clothes,
keep the hats on. Wade into the pond.
Cars drive by but nobody stops.
Fish, bullfrogs make way.
A great blue heron takes flight.
Squishy mud between our toes,
simply wading. Glory. Hot day.
Still wet, we pull our pants on.
A sheriff’s deputy stops his cruiser,
leans, lowers the window,
says there was a complaint,
two old men naked in hats,
personally he doesn’t care but
the young mothers seem the most upset,
what if the children saw?
“Haven’t seen any,” we say,
“but we’ll keep a watch.”
We tip our hats to the officer
and walk home with our private thoughts,
mine of greeting Debbie still a young lady
in heaven. Howdy, ma’am.
…..
First published in Sheila-Na-Gig
Thank you editor Hayley Mitchell Haugen
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