When I was young, I was a competitive swimmer. I spent many hours in the pool, working out with my teammates. There are specific . . . understandings . . . of swimming with other swimmers. Lane protocols, I guess you’d call them. Basically, you don’t get in the way of someone else’s workout. You work hard. You let others work hard. You don’t become an obstacle.
Years later, when I just wanted to swim laps for fitness, I would go to the pool at the gym during open lap swimming hours. The pool had some basic rules for lap swimming, and former swimmers followed all the old protocols. But. Well. Let’s just say a lot of people weren’t “former swimmers.” And they didn’t get the protocol memo, y’know?
So lap swimming for fitness was filled with frustrating . . . obstacles.
(Just like, well . . . life.)
When I found this poem by Alison Luterman online several years ago, it resonated immediately. And, sure. Maybe it won’t be the same for you . . . if you don’t have any lap swimming experience. But I’m kinda thinking it will. Because we all have obstacles in our days, in our lives. And Alison’s poem shows us that those obstacles might be there in our lane, in our lives, for a purpose.
I hope you enjoy this poem as much as I do.
(Because there are lots of obstacles out there . . . ) (So many obstacles.)
Because Even the Word Obstacle is An Obstacle
Alison LutermanTry to love everything that gets in your way:
the Chinese women in flowered bathing caps
murmuring together in Mandarin, doing leg exercises in your lane
while you execute thirty-six furious laps,
one for every item on your to-do list.
The heavy-bellied man who goes thrashing through the water
like a horse with a harpoon stuck in its side,
whose breathless tsunamis rock you from your course.
Teachers all. Learn to be small
and swim through obstacles like a minnow
without grudges or memory. Dart
toward your goal, sperm to egg. Thinking ‘Obstacle’
is another obstacle. Try to love the teenage girl
idly lounging against the ladder, showing off her new tattoo:
‘Cette vie est la mienne,’ This life is mine,
in thick blue-black letters on her ivory instep.
Be glad she’ll have that to look at all her life,
and keep going, keep going. Swim by an uncle
in the lane next to yours who is teaching his nephew
how to hold his breath underwater,
even though kids aren’t allowed at this hour. Someday,
years from now, this boy
who is kicking and flailing in the exact place
you want to touch and turn
will be a young man, at a wedding on a boat
raising his champagne glass in a toast
when a huge wave hits, washing everyone overboard.
He’ll come up coughing and spitting like he is now,
but he’ll come up like a cork,
alive. So your moment
of impatience must bow in service to a larger story,
because if something is in your way it is
going your way, the way
of all beings; towards darkness, towards light.
Today’s poem was first published in The Sun, January 2010. You can find information about Alison Luterman on her website here.
==========
You can find A Gathering of Poetry every month . . . on the third Thursday.
Share some.
Read some.
Gather up some poetry!
(Bonny is hosting a special link-up for A Gathering of Poetry. Be sure to check it out!)
This poem holds a lot! Of imagery, ideas, humor, and larger stories. Thanks for sharing; I’m definitely going to read more of Alison Luterman’s poetry.
Oh yes! I do remember those lane obstacles…..great poem Kym – a lot of fun in this one.
This is a full poem… so many thoughts! I was never a swimmer but I can dog paddle with the best of them! I found a kinship with the heavy-bellied man thrashing like a horse with a harpoon creating tsunamis like a boss!
It makes me think of “sidewalk etiquette” as well… and I am going to take her minnow advice to heart!
I haven’t been much of a poetry fan, but I have to say whenever I read the poems you share I am struck with how beautifully they address a subject. This one is no exception. Thank you for sharing it.
I was on a swim team years ago and recognize these feelings so well! This poem works in a literal and metaphorical sense, and I love that. Thanks for sharing it!
I love that poem! It resonates literally and figuratively, even though I never learned to do a flip turn.
I like the images and feeling of that poem! I learned to swim in a lake at Girl Scout Camp and probably would have loved competitive swimming, but I went to school before Title IX and our school had no sports for girls. I remember one summer after watching the women swimmers in the Olympics, my friends and I tried doing those flip turns off the raft in our lake!
I love a poem that says what it’s about in the first line! and your personal connection to the obstacles is very cool (I don’t think I knew about the swimming!?)
Obstacles, this poem provides a different way of looking at them. Of course, that is what the best poetry does for a reader/listener. Thanks.
Matthew was explained meditation and Buddhism to me yesterday. This poem is very Buddhist…and I love it.
Love this poem and all the cleverly described imagery like the rotund (her word was far more descriptive) man thrashing and so many new-to-us players like the displayer of tattoo artistry against ivory skin (one word “ivory” which says it all). It also calls to mind terms like “adult swim”, “baby pool”, “cannonball” – all memories of days gone by. Do people even respect “adult” swim anymore? Which makes me think of sidewalk etiquette as well. This poem as it turns out is “loaded” with issues beyond pool lanes. You’ve touched a nerve, Kym, as you so often do. Chloe
Wowza. I think I would have gotten it without your intro but your intro really (really) helped me to get even more from this poem. What a great metaphor for the obstacles in our daily lives.
That is a great poem!!
That poem is inspiirational. I will be thinking of it for a long time. Thank you for putting it out there.