By Sonya Fitzmaurice
Sunshine spotted the city sidewalk around the playground. The kaleidoscope filtered through a canopy of trees lining the street outside its tall metal fence—a fortress of suspended time blessed by the hourly church bells around the corner. Mom and I would visit whenever there was a chance between errands from the bakery or market.
The park was often empty, and I had the pick of playground rides, but the swings were my favorite. They were the old metal ones with a bar across the front that had to be wrestled over clanking chains and pulled down to secure the seat. Mom gave me a push start before my legs took over. The harder I pumped, the higher I surged into a splash of sun above the trees, blinding the moment of flight. Once my gaze leveled the crossbeam bar, I would stretch my legs out as far as I could and bend my head back, gliding through a sheet of wind. The momentum was lost when Mom signaled a close with the wave of her hand. We always left the park before hearing the church bells a second time.
That was long before Mom’s legs betrayed her. Perhaps if she had known the MS would eventually confine her to bed, we would have stayed a bit longer, soared a little higher. At least long enough to hear the bells once more.
Sonya Fitzmaurice lives and writes creative nonfiction in Easton, Pennsylvania. As a true-vintage soul, her work contains traces of former eras and incarnations. You can find her inspired musings on Storydweller at sonyamfitzmaurice.substack.com.
Image by Yakup Polat courtesy of Pexels
“surge into a splash of sun above the trees” fabulous and I too wish you’d been able to stay to hear the bells once more
Your writing is a treasure. I soar with your words.,My hair blows back, my legs stretch like a ballet dancer with pointed toes, my knees tuck under my seat as I get ready to soar again.
Your words capture “the fortress of suspended time,” coming round at the end wishing for more. But it is the MS that stops us short. And the realization that we must not just live in the moment, but take extra time–gorgeously defined by church bells– for the things that delight us, and the things that matter.most.
“A sheet of wind.” 🙂
PS: I have two wooden swings hanging from exposed beams in my downstairs recreation room.
Gorgeous – “surge into a splash of sun” – what a lovely phrase! The final paragraph – the words and the structure of the piece- took my breath away. Thank you.