Bad Day (The Shots You Don’t Take)
I was stopped for speeding earlier this week, and justifiably so, unless the cop was just profiling every black guy who just happened to be going 43 in a 25mph residential area. (I was late for work. That’s no excuse for driving like a menace, but it is a valid reason.)
In the aftermath, I couldn’t stop my hands from shaking for the remainder of the day. As a child, I never grasped why my family collectively feared police, but by age 45, I completely understood the subtle nuances. I laughed at the long, subtle transition of perspective, especially in this era when one false twitch can make guys who look like me into a hashtag (#BarryD #HeWasHarmless #HeWasScaredOfSpidersAndCopsAndBeingLateForWork).
My boneheaded commute had earned me a two-hundred-dollar citation, but I wasn’t lying lifeless face-down on the pavement riddled with peace-keeper rounds, so I considered it a net-win. All things considered, it was just a bad day that could’ve been far worse.
I discussed this with wifey, and she said that us humans have a one-hundred-percent survival rate during bad days. I supposed that was true, even while dismissing this as a bland “You miss one-hundred percent of the shots you don’t take” motivational slogan. But then I began to analyze this statement, and while technically true, on the occasion that a bad day is not survivable, depending on various lifespans, your bad-day survival rate drops anywhere from 90 to 99.9999 percent, which is not too shabby, all things considered.
Granted, your percentage will never again increase on account of you being dead and all.
So, you will either survive your bad day, or you will perish from it. But more often than not, you will survive it. I consider that a net-win. I told Wifey there’s a poem in there somewhere, and I hoped to fish it out. She urged me to reconsider, but you only miss one-hundred percent of the shots you don’t take.
November stormfront
frozen rain stings rosy cheeks
I blush through the grey
***
Written for dVerse Haibun Monday: Transitions, hosted by Merril D. Smith.
Please be careful.
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i am glad you coaxed the poem out that was a brilliant haiku
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Wifey sounds like a good partner to have by your side. I’m glad you survived to take this poetic shot.
I like the colors and word play in the haiku.
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We will survive our bad days so wifey is right. Just take it easy on the roads. Love your November stormfront haiku. Thanks for joining in.
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Good observation from your wife: “us humans have a one-hundred-percent survival rate during bad days”
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I am not surprised your hands were shaking. You could have ended up as the Christmas Angel on the tree this year..Lucky escape…Take care.
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I can’t usurp my mom’s spot! I suppose I’ll have to slow down… 😘
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