By Renee Nicholson
Thud of drums, The Edge’s guitar lick reverberating in our sternums, and the first flinty sound of Bono’s voice. We never expected “Sunday, Bloody Sunday.” A perfect choice. We turned to each other, big, surprised expressions like in a movie scene. Nate fist-pumped the air, and we started moving, dancing in a sea of benevolent strangers. Nate no longer a metastatic cancer patient, years erased from my life with rheumatoid arthritis. As the cool breeze wafted in off the riverfront, submerged in the music of our lost youth, we released: free, young, healthy, and above all, acutely alive.
A former ballet dancer, past Emerging Writer-in-Residence at Penn State-Altoona, and author of Roundabout Directions to Lincoln Center, Renée K. Nicholson is assistant professor in the Programs for Multi- and Interdisciplinary Studies at West Virginia University. Her writing has appeared in Poets & Writers, Midwestern Gothic, Moon City Review, The Superstition Review, The Gettysburg Review and elsewhere. Renée’s creative projects include editing prose for the journal Souvenir, teaching ballet and choreographing for young dancers, and collaborating with healthcare professionals in narrative medicine. Her website is www.reneenicholson.com.
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