The Icelandic connection - 01.06.2010, Page 34

The Icelandic connection - 01.06.2010, Page 34
32 ICELANDIC CONNECTION Vol. 63 #1 I believe . . . by Leah Bjornson I believe in cement shoes. They keep our heads forever looking up while our feet sink in the mud. Clouds pass and obscure our view, casting shad- ows that distract us from the life of which we caught a glimpse. That life we saw is a dream; we are stuck in a different reali- ty, built out of limitations and desire. Our companions plod on beside us with a gloomy air, without any conviction to escape this mundane march. We hear the thudding footsteps to our left, and the drudging paces to our right. The stiffness in our joints has long since become a phantom pain, as if a shade sits on our shoulders and whispers of what used to be. The urge to flex our toes and arch our feet is a distant and hazy memory. But when 1 hang my head, I am reminded of my cement shoes, and so I lift my eyes and plan for better days. It’s easy to follow in the footsteps of cement shoes. With every step, the ground sinks deeper and the path grows more permanent. As the dirt sinks, it Rev. stefa ia,Jomssoia/ ARBORG UNITARIAN CHURCH GIMLI UNITARIAN CHURCH 9 Rowand Avenue Winnipeg, Manitoba R3J 2N4 Telephone: (204) 889-4746 E-mail: sjonasson@uua.org becomes harder and harder to escape. Day after day, the earth shifts and we find ourselves eye-to-eye with ferns, then rocks, then ants. The others have become ants themselves, drones without dreams of what could be. Their choice has been made: security and conformity instead of risk and individuality. So they turn and carry on, content in their cement shoes. Still, I believe in cement shoes. They strengthen my resolve to pull my feet out of the mud and search for the world above. Every step is a reminder to contin- ue to struggle against restrictions and boundaries. It requires enormous effort to lift my feet out of the trench-like path, stomped into existence by orthodoxy. The swollen river of my peers tries to carry me along, but little do they understand my drive and determination to break free. Each handful of dirt, every inch upward, brings me closer to the surface, until finally I pull myself over the edge. Gasping and panting, I arch my feet, wig- gling one toe, then another, then all ten at the same time. Casting a sideways glance at the flood of heads and shoulders below, I about-face and advance with my head securely in the clouds. I believe in cement shoes. - Leah Bjornson

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