The Changing Color of the Leaves

Corey Wade is a public agent and he doesn't know who he works for. He dreams about saving dolphins, speaking in front of a large crowd and proving difficult math theorems. He is very impressed with the choreography of his better half. He's waiting for the plum trees to ripen so that they can make plum jam together. This poem seems like a season poem at first, but it really goes beyond the concept of season and extends into the stretches of lifetime. 

The Changing Color of the Leaves
By Corey Wade

There are very few things

that match the changing color

of the leaves:

hot apple cider

on late cool afternoons

or diving under fallen leaves

and making angel wings;

rolling down grassy hills

and then trying to stand up

before dizzily falling down

as the sky shifts above;

throwing objects up high

to knock down the perfect apple

that is bruised on the other side;

digging into the plate

with parents going bonkers

and making contact for a hit

in between second and third;

driving out to a peak

to witness a West Coast sunset

that leaves colors and sparkles

on the houses and the sea;

sharing a hot chocolate

in a small cafe

with good conversation

about the purpose of art;

reading Rilke or Bukowski

alone in an apartment

on a rainy afternoon;

walking through South Berkeley

to the Ashby Flea Market

with a radical old man

who can't get enough bananas;

playing Memory by the fire

with kids that finally get it

and running through the open streets

to make this life a blur.


 

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