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Locomotor
I rode the rails from St. Louis to Chicago
 also rode them many other places
 downtown where my soul settles into its excitement
 and back to wherever I have to be, Purple and Blue, in and out
 of neighborhoods like Lakeview, suburbs like South Elgin
 stretching my limbs across the Midwest
 leaving breadcrumb trails so I could always find my way
 home, and so you could follow me
 when you met my friends John Merlo, Ann Sather, or the 81 bus
 even though a lot of times we got lost
 the trail becomes circuitous, like spokes of a wheel.
 
 I rode my bicycle
 forty miles without any training.
   Unintuitive as it seems, we’re built for it, this wandering.
 I didn’t know where I was going;
 I wasn’t going anywhere;
 but I know where I am—
 right smack in the middle of everywhere,
 I am with you here, with me here, center.
 The trail always leads the same place, like
 tunnel vision
 
 around and around
 underneath the low-hanging coniferous
 branches in front of the holiday hearth.
 
 I shone my beacon
 and put on my reflectors
 and as I went along, I didn’t realize my cowcatcher
 was bowling whole directions out of the way
 smooth eraser.
 
 And with that oblivion
 went what is called “forward”
 because I dismounted
 not realizing the engine with power pushes
 backwards, pedal-stroke pistons.
 
 I was destined to meet you back where I started
 at home.

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