The stranger in the car behind
A mighty gust of fog rips 3 bicycles 
from the rope-and-bungee web atop my van
to fly past the rear window as my gut drops
in a center lane on the Golden Gate Bridge 
so I stop. God help me, I stop. 
Jump out. Run back 
to where the stranger in the car behind 
blessedly not a tailgater braked in time 
now has put on his blinkers and hustled forward 
as together under steel cables 
while wet wind howls with diesel smoke 
as cars roar by on both sides 
while an oil tanker glides beneath
he says not one word in the quick desperation
helps gather 3 bent bicycles from the roadway 
which I stuff on top of 3 scared children 
as the stranger to whom I said not one word 
not a thank you not a moment for it
runs back to his car in the mad din of about 30 seconds 
while I hop into the driver’s seat 
and stomp on the gas and — gone. 
And the stranger whoever 
never asked to be a hero 
pumped adrenaline scrambled amid traffic 
where no trucks or busses plowed into us 
survived and drove on and — gone. 
So to you right here right now reading this poem — 
    Yes, you —
To all you strangers in all the cars behind 
let me say in advance: 
    Thank you. 
Bless you for what without hesitation you will do.
    Thank you so much.
……
First published in Sheila-Na-Gig. Thank you Hayley Haugen, editor
photo by Hafis Pratama Rendra Graha
Note: This is a poem of gratitude but not of instruction. Really, this stranger should not have stepped onto the Golden Gate Bridge. People die doing that. Just stopping his car was enough. I’m so grateful but please—don’t get out. We were very, very lucky. 
Hear me: 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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