The cure for anything is salt water, it rings and rings in your ears and you never tire of hearing it.
I get on the parkway, driving against rush hour traffic in the sunny mid-morning, the New York Bay glittering at my side. There's a metaphor here about going against the current, about how easy it is, but it comes out sounding so trite against reality.
The waves at Jones Beach are a rough but consistent, dragging a slew of seaweed and silt from the ends of the earth to your ankles. Groups of youngsters shriek and giggle at the cold but you dive right in, the brief short circuit of winter waters like a wake up call. Dive into a wave, swim over another. Surf a short wave to shore, float across the billows. Once one wave passes, another appears in its place. Sometimes bigger, sometimes smaller, forever the promise of a perfect wave just beyond this one.
Stand there for hours losing track of time, what use could you have in knowing what the clock says. You never regret one last dive in the water reminds itself to you and you let yourself stay longer. Your shoulders fizzle. Another dive. Your legs tire. Another dive. A dolphin leaps at the edge of your vision,you look around to see if anyone else noticed. The Universe winks at you now and again. Summer is here.
I return to the city smelling of salt, skin flushed, head tired. All the debris that lingered in my chest has been washed away, nothing matters now. I look at houses along the shoreline, consider a fall spent marinating. My landlord writes to say the rent is going up and anyway I don't know if you were planning on coming back. All the world's potential lies ahead.
All you have to do it dive in after it.