Ted Kooser. Photo credit: UNL Publications and Photography. If at times your world seems flat and uninteresting, I recommend making a cardboard viewfinder with a postage-stamp sized window.
Then look at what's around you through that. I think you'll be pleased and surprised by how much you can see when the rest is pushed outside of the frame.
This poem is from my book “Kindest Regards,” published by Copper Canyon Press.
Passing Through
I had driven into one side of a city, and through it, and was on the way out on a four-lane, caught up in the traffic, when I happened to glance to my right where a man stood alone smoking, fixed in the shade of a windowless warehouse, leaning back into a wall with one shoe cocked against it, the other one flat on the pavement. He was beside me for only an instant, wearing a short-sleeved yellow shirt and gray work pants, as the hand that held the cigarette swept out and away, and he turned to watch it as with the tip of a finger he tapped once at the ash, which began to drift into that moment already behind us, as I, with the others, sped on.
Ted Kooser. Photo credit: UNL Publications and Photography. If at times your world seems flat and uninteresting, I recommend making a cardboard viewfinder with a postage-stamp sized window.
Then look at what's around you through that. I think you'll be pleased and surprised by how much you can see when the rest is pushed outside of the frame.
This poem is from my book “Kindest Regards,” published by Copper Canyon Press.
Passing Through
I had driven into one side of a city, and through it, and was on the way out on a four-lane, caught up in the traffic, when I happened to glance to my right where a man stood alone smoking, fixed in the shade of a windowless warehouse, leaning back into a wall with one shoe cocked against it, the other one flat on the pavement. He was beside me for only an instant, wearing a short-sleeved yellow shirt and gray work pants, as the hand that held the cigarette swept out and away, and he turned to watch it as with the tip of a finger he tapped once at the ash, which began to drift into that moment already behind us, as I, with the others, sped on.