Walking With Sharks

The silvering of the rain-clouded sky when the sun leaks in.

The way a cormorant sitting on a floating log looks like a shark’s fin, the visible tip of a monster lurking in the shallows. Is that intentional? An avian swagger, a biological fake ID announcing:

I am dangerous?

The way dogs approach with eager anticipation, so assured of their welcome by every person, so confident that they are inherently worthy of love.

The contrast between the forlorn cry of a seagull, a piercing melancholy, like a poem, and his buffoonery after he lands. He’s a literary imposter, at heart simply a self-absorbed scavenger of foul rotting carcasses.

Only on the wing does he achieve divinity.

The companionability of accidentally rubbing against your arm as we walk along the shore. There it is, a solid and reassuring reminder of safe passage—together, we are

protected from the sharks.

This is an historical relationship, by which I mean there is a long history and

it is pleasant to walk with someone whose arm I can bump with impunity.

While we’re on the topic of sharks, check out the heart-stopping poetry (and fiction, and essays, and visual art) at sharkreef.org. The Winter 2022 Issue is now live!


Photo of a cormorant on a log by Philip Stewart (mercury filter added); photo of driftwood in the water by Nikita Tikhomirov @niki_mir

Shari Lane

I’ve been a lawyer, board president, preschool teacher and middle school teacher, friend, spouse, mother, and now grandmother, but one thing has never changed: from the time I could hold a pencil, I’ve been a writer of stories, a spinner of tales - often involving dragons (literal or metaphorical). I believe we are here to care for each other and this earth. Most of all, I believe in kindness and laughter. (And music and good books, and time spent with children and dogs. And chocolate.)

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