Consuming August
13 August 2022
Louis Vincent Balbi
Tending to my daily duty
to Yeats’s dying animal —
the mortal body we
each are fastened to —
I put in time on my sturdy
Schwinn recumbent exercise bike
listening to an Audible audiobook.
Now I am as hot and sweaty
as when stepping out of a steamy
shower without feeling clean or squeaky.
How I hate the heat until those days
when it radiates to fight the chill inside
come blue-hued winter mornings.
But this being August,
I grab bottled relief from the freezer.
I switch my blue ice-water bottle
from right hand to left and back again.
After minutes, it chills my palms;
seconds later, the blue cylinder
love-bites my fingers with its frost.
Drinking a few mouthfuls of ice water,
some internal thermostat clicks
and I feel a change come over me
as cold quenches my thirsty throat.
But heat still drenches my body
so much that my ass is sweating —
despite the AC blowing full throttle —
until time holding onto the bottle
slowly helps me feel comfortable
in my dripping skin once again.
Wiping stinging sweat from my eyes,
with relief I focus on the proud words
on the blue transparent bottle.
Made in the USA.
God bless the land-of-the-free worker
(or machine) who made this BPA-free.
Throughout the day,
but especially before I exercise,
I stick the bottle in the freezer
until ice crystals form.
Sometimes, I forget it there
and it freezes too much.
Then it has to sit with me in the heat.
It sweats as much as I do,
which is a lot. Like a pig, as they say.
Although I have never seen a pig sweat.
When enough liquid sloshes
around the melting iceberg
within, I shake it, then drink.
It is gloriously arctic.
Iceberg inside, like a ship in a bottle,
headed with a carved wooden angel,
transports me to a temperate landfall.
I’m on a keto diet that likes sea salt.
So, into the bottle’s big mouth —
almost as large as mine —
I concoct a version of Bradbury’s
potent medicine for melancholy
to slake my quenchable thirst.
Not a delicate dandelion wine
but a something-wonderful-this-way-comes
good witch’s cold brew of filtered water,
pinch of Celtic Sea — or Redmond Real — Salt,
a lemon’s fresh-squeezed juice,
and drops of sugar-free electrolytes.
Tart, salty, and ice cold,
this glacial ambrosia refreshes
my hot tongue and dry mouth.
I let it linger before swallowing.
I savor it more than I once enjoyed
sipping a crisp Chardonnay
back in the days of wine and hangovers.
My entire body cools down
from holding it while drinking.
A really cool thing, almost magical,
although science — physics, actually —
called “conductive heat transfer.”
Listen to me, trying to sound smart.
The heat’s definitely got to my head.
The familiar cat in the house
looks alertly when I shake
the frosty water bottle.
Her amazing eyes track
every droplet of condensation
that whirls off into the air.
She is poised to jump
but sees no prey worth chasing.
Her bright eyes gaze into mine
then casually look away with indifference.
But I imagine that the cat’s inscrutable nature
somehow senses that these rabid dog days
are only going to get worse from here on out.
I’m relieved I discovered a personal remedy,
because no one else seems to
have a freaking, fracking clue
what to do about the flaming future
but to continue waking up every day
and doing what they did yesterday.
I think maybe I need to order another
Nalgene Wide Mouth 32-ounce Water Bottle
“with easy-to-use screw-top, loop-top lid.”
Fifteen bucks for relief seems reasonable —
as long as there’s drinkable water
and a working cold freezer to put it in.
I wonder which color
should I purchase this time?
Decisions!