The thing about Todd Lake is that the water is warm, even though it’s a mountain lake, and it’s really shallow; you can still touch in the middle. So you can go out there even if you’re afraid of swimming, and you should, because the other thing about Todd Lake is that there’s a mountain on each end, and from the middle you can twirl and see both.
At one end of the lake (where you can see Mt. Bachelor) there’s a meadow, and in the meadow there’s a family, and in the family there’s these two kids. The kids are playing and yelling (or laughing? hard to tell) and from a distance they feel like Leo’s kids in Inception, which is to say they are perfect but also faceless. Like, it doesn’t matter who their parents are or what their life has been like or who they’ll grow up to be. From this distance, they’re just symbols for whatever it is we want children to embody; innocence, ignorance, joy?
Or maybe it isn’t the distance, but the place. It’s the kind of place that seems to exist outside of the world I know, and maybe outside of time, too. There’s just too much good here to leave any room for what I’ve been or what I’m going to be. There’s only one moment at a time. So while Noah and Maddy drift further down the boardwalk, I hang back, waiting for that tiny instant when they are about to become a part of the landscape—about to, but haven’t just yet.