The Enterprise Sinks

Dewi
Chalkboard
Published in
2 min readOct 23, 2017
Tasman Lake Glacier. Photo by Me

We walked briskly on the gravelled valley path surrounded by snow-peaked mountains without enough adjectives in my meagre dictionary. We were on the clock.

Tasman Lake watched in silence, unimpressed by our guide’s voice, our breaths and chatter, the boat’s hum and the ripples it introduced. We cruised around the ever still, yet always changing panorama.

I touched the ice our guide broke off for our pleasure. It was older than its word; I am the infant that spoke transient names to its shapes. There, a tanning chair. There, crystal popcorns. Here, the enterprise ship.

The guide said that every now and then a piece would break off from its weakest point. Each time this happens, it would tip and find its new balance, slowly drowning in its own body. Always ten percent above water, the rest hidden from plain sight. Strange how I’ve always thought of balance as fifty-fifty.

As we left and started another hike back the trail, I looked down on the glacier lake, still melting long after we’re gone.

Immersed in blue
ever still ever changing
wordless poetry

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