Bicycling is one of the best ways toย fully immerse yourselfย in a city. As riders, we easily exchange hellos with others on our route. We feel the bumps of the road, see flowers bloom and fall, and watch the waves of people (and buses, did I mention buses?) come and go through the District.
Thanks to everybody who has been following along withย this year’sย 30 Days of Biking photo and poetryย project. April ridesย have been so rewarding, allowing me toย seek outย both new and familiar writers while also exploring my city.
Last year, 30 Days of Bikingย helped renew my interest in urban cycling, and thatย carried through into this year. The city is such a dynamic place, changing under our noses if we pay any attention.
Day 15
Bells. A time to turn
for home. But now you
pretend to listen to a
piano in the window of
the music store. Songs
shine at the corners of
your eyes. Whether to
turn another corner is
the sadness.
–Donald W. Baker, Waiting
Day 16

Hoy viene a mi la damisela soledad
con pamela, impertinentes y botรณn
de amapola en el oleaje de sus vuelos.
Hoy la voluble seรฑorita es amistad
y acaricia finalmente el corazรณn
con su mรกs delgado pรฉtalo de hielo.
Por eso hoy
gentilmente te convido a pasear
por el patio, hasta el florido pabellรณn
de aquel รกrbol que plantaron los abuelos.
Hoy el ensueรฑo es como el musgo en el brocal
dibujando los abismos de un amor
melancรณlico, sutil, pรกlido cielo.
–Silvio Rodrรญguez, Oh Melancolรญa
Day 17

And
although he had no sense of being on a journey,
such memories made him realize how far he had
traveled, which, in turn, made him ask how he
would look back on the person he was now, this
person who seemed so substantial. These images, it
was like looking at a book of old photographs,
recognizing a forehead, the narrow chin, and
perhaps recalling the story of an older second
cousin, how he had left long ago to try his luck in
Argentina or Australia. And he saw that he was
becoming like such a person, that the day might
arrive when he would look back on his present self
as on a distant relative who had drifted off into
uncharted lands.
–Stephen Dobyns, [Over a cup of coffee]
Day 18
Slowly, slowly wisdom gathers:
Golden dust in the afternoon,
Somewhere between the sun and me,
Sometimes so near that I can see,
Yet never settling, late or soon.
Would that it did, and a rug of gold
Spread west of me a mile or more:
Not large, but so that I might lie
Face up, between the earth and sky,
And know what none has known before.
–Mark Van Doren, Slowly, Slowly Wisdom Gathers
Day 19

I am dying to be written about in your diary
and my self-involvement extends to endless
photographs of my eye makeup, which might be described
as โsignature.โ FYI I prefer a fine brush to a pen.
What can be said about slush, about the corners cut when cleaning
the fridge. What can be said about what is considered
to be ordinary. Crucially, love is a desire
to be a witness and be witnessed, how you might skate
past the provisional. If the house were burning down
I would rescue all the photographs
–Amy Key, Announcement and Next Steps
Day 20

The song is drink, is color. Come now, taste
what the world has to offer. When you eat
you will know that music comes in guisesโ
bold of crepe myrtle, sweet of daffodilโ
beyond sound, guises they never told you
could be true. And they arenโt. Except they are
so real now, this spring, you know them, taste them.
–Camille T. Dungy, What to Eat, What to Drink, and What to Leave for Poison
Day 21




