To the leaf that was stuck in my windshield wiper.
I see you. I know why you’re there. A fallen leaf from the tree in my front yard. I should know the species, but I don’t, so at first, you mock my ignorance. You are yellow with specks of brown. You flap in the wind while I drive down 205. I activate my wipers and you just roll with them, taking a ride, and all the while I can’t stop looking.
But that’s the point, isn’t it?
I am supposed to ignore you. I succeeded in my efforts to become less anal-retentive. I do not have OCD. Anytime OCD reared its head I shot it down. I was lucky. I did not want to be a slave to ritual. I didn’t need the world to be symmetric and organized the way my brain likes it. I should just let you go. Whether you are there or not, I should look ahead and concentrate on my driving. It’s safer. I am an adult. I should move on.
But you keep flapping. It’s a small vibrating movement out of the corner of my eye. You are testing me to see if I crack. This has become a battle of will. I cannot let a dead leaf beat me. I am stronger. I will focus on my job. I’ll listen to my podcasts and watch for traffic and pretty soon that leaf will fall from memory. I daydream a little about when my kids were little. I think of Thanksgiving and Christmas, and Halloween costumes. I am reminded of how excited the little ones get when the temperature drops. I think of the taste of nutmeg and pumpkin pie. I imagine that stuffed feeling you get when there is too much sugary crap around. I see an SUV in front of me and wonder if it’s parents out shopping for gifts.
Dammit. You’re back.
I thought I had it. I went about ten minutes without looking. I had two stops to make and you were completely out of sight and out of mind. Then the flapping kicked in again. You returned. The cycle began anew. I hate you, you asshole.
I see you again and again. The flapping. The damn flapping. I notice there is a second leaf wedged in there as well, but he’s not flapping because he’s not an asshole.
You win. I give. At one of my last stops I yank you and your friend out and whip you into a nearby driveway. Congratulations. You beat me.
My victory is that I don’t care that I was bested by a dead leaf. I’m not saddened; I don’t beat myself up. I laugh about it. Then I write about it.
Thanks, leaf.
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