Friday, February 18, 2011

Uphill Skiing

It took place in only a couple of seconds. However, it will take considerably more words to explain. I noticed her too. She came out of a store using what looked like two ski poles. She planted one firmly on the ground, took a step and then planted the other and followed that with another step. It looked like she was cross country skiing on dry pavement. These poles were not crutches, they were for some other purpose, perhaps balance, perhaps something else. She moved slowly but purposely. Her walk, besides being slow, besides being between two ski poles, seemed normal, not laboured.

When the first pole came out of the store, attached to an arm, a group of young teens noticed, like I did, and stopped all activity. They wanted, like I did, to see what a ski pole was doing on the streets of Toronto. They watched with incredulity as she slowly emerged from the store. They nudged each other and began to laugh. She was for them in the moment, a subject of mirth. She heard them. I saw her hear them. I saw her face set as she swung each pole, one at a time, slowly stepping between them. She'd heard the laughter before.

She looked up and at them. The boys laughing. She had that look that mother's have. The one that, even though her hair was not of writhing snakes, turned men into boys and boys into stone. Laughter froze on their face. They knew that they had been heard. And though they were free to judge her, and find her unworthy, suddenly they found themselves judged, unworthy. She didn't say a word. She just looked at them, frankly. Without fear.

They stood there and watched as she slowly approached them. One of the boys, the oldest looking, as she approached reached up and took the touque from his head and held it meekly in his hands. He now looked like a shy four year old quaking in front of an angry teacher. He nodded to her. She nodded back.

She continued to ski past them, like an Olympian on a winter day.

They, appropriately, remained frozen.

7 comments:

  1. The poles are for walking - and they give people who want to walk for exercise and upper body work out as well as excercising their leg muscles.

    Way to go!!!!! Glad she could stare down her potential mocking audience. We need to share her technique with others!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Dear Dave:

    I would love to learn that look!!!

    Thanks for a great start to my day
    Colleen

    ReplyDelete
  3. Good for her! It sounds like she has a lot of natural authority. I have seen someone using those poles too. It looked more to me like it was helping with balance and spatial relations than just for exercise but I don't know anything.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Good for her. I hope those boys remember that feeling.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Too funny. I've got the poles (Nordic walking poles, use all year round! YES great upper body workout and actually relieves stress on knees, legs, etc...), but really want the look!

    ReplyDelete
  6. The wheeliecrone says -

    My children called it "the snake-killer" look. My daughter used to say that if I sent that look into her face, her eyeballs froze over, and if I sent it into her back, her heart stopped for just a beat or two.
    All I can say is, it worked really well, particularly in public. A bunch of teen-age boys? No problem at all.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I don't have a look.

    My MIL uses those poles - something like 30% more muscle engagement when you use them. And, oddly, she reports less fatigue.

    I see them all over but it's the West Coast, so.

    ReplyDelete

Thank you for your comment. Disagreement with the blog post and heated debate about issues raised are welcome. However, comments which personally attack or bully another or comments which are not relevant to the blog post or the blog theme may be removed.