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Swinging
Copyright (c) 2003 J.D. Chapman
All Rights Reserved
I sit down on the rubberized slab
that bends to fit my rear, chain links connecting down to triangular frames
of tube steel on each edge of a board of cheddar cheese. The chains (smooth
iron ellipses) rise up and up to about there, clearly too distant to jump
up and reach (even with a monumental leap); the crossbar must be twice
my standing height. Oh, I've been on these things before -- I remember
my mom pushing me on something similar when I was but a toddler (I remember
the thrill of the ride) -- and yet I am hazy on how to initiate its motion.
This seems somewhat peculiar for I don't think that I am a child, although
as my age eludes me then I guess that it's irrelevant, especially if I
am right and I am in my dream.
A young boy, maybe six or seven, smiles as he sits in
the seat and scrutinizes me as he moves his legs and commences, smaller
arcs to start, and then gradually becoming medium arcs. But when he sees
me frown and struggle, swinging my legs in vain rounded crescents, he
purses his lips and drags his feet, once on the ground, a second time
on the ground, the third time coming to a complete stop. He sticks his
legs straight out and raises his eyebrows, showing the tiniest bit of
tongue between his lips (so that it looks like he has three lips, reminding
me of a salami sandwich) and then he drops his legs and tilts way forward,
pushing and leaning into the chains. His seat moves backward a couple
of feet and then he just makes small cycles to and fro while sitting still
to watch me.
I give it a try: I lean forward and push, but it is
tricky harmonizing the feet with the arms. I try a couple of things, my
frustration ebbing and flowing like waves on the shore, and now I seem
to have figured it out -- the push goes with the legs back, the pull goes
with the legs forward (that's all there is to it really). After a couple
of minutes I realize that the legs more follow along, that the trick is
pulling the chains at the auspicious point in the swing: just when your
stomach rises up slightly into your heart, then pull. And then no, it
is just a fraction of a second later than that, and now I am concentrating
on when to push, and I let the swing decide at first; then I'm noticing
the pressure in my hands, and when it disappears (no maybe a second later)
I push for headway. The cheddar cheese swing seems to periodically nudge
its approval and the rhythm locks me in with a comfort that is enveloping
and reassuring.
I am in my mother's arms and she is humming a peculiar
melody, although I recognize it because it is the same one that she hums
to me all the time, honey with lemon, and as she purrs she is shifting
me in her arms, almost forward and back, a little side to side, but it
is not an uncomfortable feeling, it is rather soothing, honey with lemon,
and as my eyes drift slowly shut and then open again my seat is moving,
scenery is definitely passing and changing, the ground getting close and
now sliding away, the boy next to me smiling broader now, and I am happy
too. My ears register that familiar sensation caused by motion: a faint
whooshing sound from the air passing my head, cycle whoosh quiet, air
over the hair on the rims of my ears whoosh backward quiet, and it seems
to bring back a familiar sensation -- it is enrapturing and entertaining.
I lie on the grass noting the two occupied swings while
another kid with red hair is contemplating getting on; he is evaluating
what might be the best way to obtain a swing -- "do I grab the chain,
do I grab the feet, should I choose the 3-year old on the left or the
smaller 4-year old on the right," and he is wobbly about the protocol,
"should I be a gazelle or should I be a rhinoceros," unsure
how to approach them. He is maybe four himself (although a big lad for
his age) and now he has made up his mind and is walking quite decidedly
up to the 3-year old on the left; the determined redhead kid craving a
swing chooses rhinoceros with his horn down.
His mom is chatting with a friend on a park bench maybe
twenty feet away and as the scene unfolds in click-stop-action, the mom
rises from the bench and calls out her son's name at the precise instant
that the 3-year old comes barreling legs first smack into the approaching
redhead, knocking him flat onto his butt and then down onto his back (with
a slight thump of his head on the sand). Dust clouds rising, tears and
crying yelps, as the two moms rush over to the scene the swinging 3-year
old continues back and forth as though nothing changed (with the slightest
perplexed look on his face).
I'm in the finals -- after hours of swinging just four
of us remain. When the fellow on the left poops out he topples from his
swing like an ice cream cone with an overpiled scoop. Three of us are
now swinging and the other two kids, both a bit older than me, start a
mini-competition with their egos battling one another: swords clanking
and tank cannon firing, challenging each other higher and higher. One
of them propels himself up and up, oh no -- he passes that point where
gravity balances, his centripetal force crosses the "bump zone,"
he is tumbling straight down toward the crossbar in a neck-cracking death
drop. He barely misses it by jerking his head back, but his gyration dethrones
him from his swing and he smacks onto the ground.
Now it's just me and the other fellow and we sneer at
each other (his turret swung around to engage) even as I make up my mind
to ignore him: I will pace myself and simply outlast him. The hours wear
on and his taunting continues, laser eye tag and tongue waggling and fire
spitting; after another half hour we are both drooping with our ordeal
when the crowd starts cheering. We battle the pain in our hands and our
legs, but he is paying the price for his taunts and is losing his energy.
He slows and slows some more while I keep on my constant rhythm -- meanwhile
the crowd is rooting for their favorite. I take a hand off one of the
chains and wave to the roaring in my ears; he stops now and I am the winner.
I am floating through space with the music and the rhythm,
a Disneyland ride that is heartlifting and serene (gentle enough for the
small kids) and after a while I am done with my thinking and I am just
swinging, and I can hear the occasional passing bug and the wind through
the trees, leaves rattling or rubbing against one another, and the thoughts
of nearby neighbors disturb what would otherwise be the white-noise perfect
silence. It could be a yellow space or a purple space (as I close my eyes
and drift into an imaginary ether) it could be the deepest blackest emptiness
with pinpricks of starlight, I change to a bird and then to a frog and
then to a deer, and then what I am doesn't matter as I am just a brain
inside of an animal's head, hurtling aimlessly through space but not going
anywhere really, just romancing my motion and the world moving around
me.
In my dream I am sucking on a lollipop in a new neighborhood
along a sidewalk with tidy houses set back all the same, and most of them
have a verdant lawn bordered with resplendent flowers. It is curious how
this lollipop tastes, sticky and tangy and juicy and as arid as the Mojave,
and when I pull it out of my mouth it is red raspberry the first time,
then blue grape the second time, and then the houses turn into mansions.
The gardens become elaborate as they try to outdo one another, large fronds
of curious ferns, layers of color terraces, birds of paradise, fountains
and sculptured waterfalls. Then I am walking on the sidewalk in front
of a chic business district where the windows are all squeaky clean with
embossed gold lettering; small redwood boxes flaunt purple heliotrope
and a variety of marigolds, yet nobody is around and the streets are quiet.
Then I am walking in the forest -- I pull out my lollipop but it is just
a white cardboard stick; the sun filters through the dusky trees and I've
outrun what my destination was to begin with, yet now that I am walking
again in front of my own house the walking was the same as if I had been
swinging.
For some reason I am borrowing things -- I turn to my
friend: can I use your swing? He nods and gestures with his hand, sure,
as if he were offering me his dinner, his automobile, his house, or maybe
his wife. Then I am swinging for a couple of hours upon a jumble of bummed
equipment, plastic trucks, teeter-totters, sliders, retreads, driftwood,
and then I am at the park. A man dressed in a chestnut-brown park service
uniform wanders by, his uniform worn into lighter-toned patches and darker
sap stains (as comfortable as old shoes), sweeping up small papers and
leaves into a fold-down metal tray -- he smiles at me and nods. I am swinging
on borrowed equipment, on borrowed time, and everyone is being kind to
me because they are happy to offer what they can -- they are happy just
to be able to help.
The small swing is unacceptable, not just because it
hurts my butt but also because it feels awkward and clumsy -- its oscillations
are too quick and it is unsatisfying in a herky jerky sort of way, like
riding a toy truck around a bumpy dirt driveway. I put my feet down to
stop, get onto the swing next to it which is standard fare (that is to
say considerably better) and I swing on that for ten minutes or so. It
is okay but not exceptional: like riding your bicycle repeatedly around
the block on the sidewalk -- it helps me think a little but is otherwise
uninspiring. I let it come to rest and get into the seat next to that.
I walk my feet all the way back and as I lift my legs to release it seems
as though I permeate the horizon of a slow motion life; the swing is smooth
and gentle and lazy, the ground actually flowing by like molasses, and
I push on the chains and press back with my legs and move a bit higher,
and over and over and over again, twelve times and then fifteen times
and then twenty times, and now I am starting to reach the maximum of my
swing. Now as I pass near the nadir the ground goes whooshing by at high
speed (so fast that it blurs) and the wind bristles my ears and my eyes
start to draw tears, like wearing my swim trunks while zooming on a motorcycle
down Topanga Canyon.
Although sometimes it's a chore, I do get the vicarious
sensation of what the person on the seat is feeling, so I stand behind
the small kid, lean down, and give him a launch (just a gentle push) as
I want to avoid alarming him or shoving him off his seat. He rocks his
feet back and forth, not like he's helping, but just as he has seen from
other kids (and partly for fun). I give him another push a bit harder
this time, like I'm pushing off from the side of the pool, and now I have
to take a couple of strides rearward to sidestep getting smacked by his
increased backward speed. Now he rises right up to my shoulder level making
the push easy and straightforward. "Higher" he says and so I
shove a bit harder, stepping back again, and now his seat goes up to my
head and then above my head, and I can barely reach it to push him. "Higher"
he says, and I can only reach his feet, so I give them a push and the
soles of his shoes cover my hands in grime, each push becoming another
dirtying experience, the filth from his shoes now spattering my face and
getting in my hair, the burbling of his joy just balancing the accumulating
grit of my sacrifice.
Now I am little again, I must be six or seven -- I can
tell because this is a modest swingset, probably just one in my neighbor's
yard, and yet the ground seems to rise and fall to quite some distance.
Ah but this will be fun, this will be a piece of cake, and as I wind back
farther and higher I project the path of my self out past the shadow of
the topbar, out past the sprinkler in the lawn, all the way within the
last yard of the edging where I will jump. Ready (and I push and squeeze
my legs with all my might) and Set (and I snap my legs forward and pull
back on the chains with all of my weight) and Go (and I need to wait half-a-swing
as I am on the backward path).
I strategically let go of my hands and circle my arms
to the insides of the chain, then down to the seat, and as I crest to
the front I push the seat down and jerk up my hips and I am airborne.
Behind me I hear the rattle of the chains from the abandoned seat and
in front of me I predict on the ground where I intend to land. I'm going
for style and distance; I think of myself as the Olympic long jump champion
in a solo practice with nobody to beat but my ghosts. I am an astronaut
floating through space, out past the nighttime vacuum of darkness on a
tetherless slow-motion walkabout. The ground rises to meet me, it becomes
lawn, it becomes the force upon my feet and then my knees, and I make
a practiced daredevil deflect-and-roll and escape unharmed.
As I approach a rather tall swing it blossoms upon me
that nobody else is around -- I somehow know that I am an adult and yet
I am rapt to attempt an experiment. The swingset has a hard plastic seat;
yes I know that standing on the seat will imply assuming some risk, but
I will be especially careful and grip the chains tightly paying close
attention at all times to my center of gravity and to being under control,
in control.
I pull a bit on the chains and push with my feet and
the seat glides rather easily out to my front with my rear hanging out
back, yet unfortunately the swing as a whole refuses to start any pendular
motion. I try it the other way, pushing the chains and leaning forward,
and to my dismay the seat skims rather easily behind me causing my back
to arch (nearly painfully so) and yet again I fail to gain any kind of
oscillation. I am trying to use a saw as a dental instrument. It is rather
peculiar and frustrating so I settle into the seat for a moment and just
ponder the mechanics (my mind drawing arrows and lines of force) and then
I reach a subliminal conclusion that naturally, swinging while standing
is impossible.
And yet I am somewhat frustrated in thinking that while
seated the mechanics and the lines of force can't be that much different
than while standing, so my brain empties rapidly. Now I am flying above
the playground with a jetpack (yes it is only a dream and yet I am still
having fun) and as I twist my legs about in the air I recognize the same
situation as while I was standing on the swing -- it neither affects my
general motion nor does it set me oscillating.
I lie down on a small squat swing, stomach down on the
seat, and my feet conveniently hang down so that my knees are almost touching
the ground. I wind, wind, wind, wind... as the chains tightly corkscrew
the seat slowly and magically rises until I'm struggling against the torque
with my toes barely touching the ground. Finally I can push no more so
I lift up my feet, and at first I am just slowly touring in a comfortable
lazy circle, an eagle on an updraft, but then the speed gradually increases
and I get a little dizzy, I've managed to place myself inside the clothes
dryer, and then as I near the ground awhump and suddenly I'm flung around
in a fast spin, my ear canals screaming whooya!
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