Monday, December 19, 2016

A Winter's Night



Winter has come upon us suddenly (but not unexpectedly) and with a vengeance.  The snow commenced week’s end last and has not stopped since.  At the end of the snow event it came up above my ankle.  Each day it continued to fall it adds another clenched fist worth of powder to the height of the total accumulation. 

My new machine for clearing snow handles up to six inches of the stuff comfortably.  Thus I have had to repeatedly trek out and move the snow.  Day first and day second it was sort of fun learning the ins and outs of proper snow throwing machine technique.  The novelty has worn off.  Now it is just another chore in a life filled with chores, dishes, laundry, the snow, feeding the cat in the morning, etc. 

The now is actually pretty, still or maybe I should say yet.  I have not grown to despise it but I will.  By February it will be as much of a constant nagging pain as my stomach is.  However, there will be no chalky balm or little capsule (that makes me belch just endlessly) to ameliorate my distress.  So, if I weren’t so tired, and I will be rested on the morrow, I would tell myself to take some photographs and play with the images.  Photos only capture the skeletal structure of reality; filters fix it and cropping focuses it.

Tonight, I will build a fire, a big fire.  I will read a book I think and not watch television.  As much as I just want to collapse I can’t allow that because if I do the elements win.  If I simply let my mind veg out I will have wasted some of the precious little time I have left on this earth.  W.S. Merwin is going blind and he still can see inwardly in ways I can barely even imagine.  He in most likelihood does not turn on some old science fiction show to unwind.  He probably has someone read him some Zen parables. 

Fear not the snow.  Fear the subdued mind.  You may have to accede to limitations your body places on you but you must fight until the end to keep your mind vibrant. 



The Season



The bed is covered with wrapping paper. Bags from stores both current and now out of business are to be found around the room.  There are bags from Younkers and Roots and Kohl’s and there is even a very old linen bag that says Eaton’s. The Eaton’s bag informs me very clearly time has flown by as the Christmas seasons have come and gone.  From the same trip where we picked up that linen, ecologically better bag, there is a picture of the lads on the lap of Santa at the Eaton Centre. John Lee was three and Loren was a baby.  On how long ago that special time seems.

Tonight, well it was the Christmas pageant at the church.  Loren and I ushered. This year’s premise was that an impresario was trying to put on the grandest and greatest Christmas spectacle ever. Act after act auditioned each with a little hint of the nativity story in their performance.  Three magicians (the Magi), a dancing lamb (her wrangler was a shepherd) and a fortune teller (prophet) all were auditioned.  Eventually the stage hand told the producer he should simplify things and just put on a dramatic retelling of the story of the Christ’s birth.  And so it was.

It was fun.  Watching kids grabbing a microphone for the first time is always a bit of blast.  There are the frightened frozen ones, there are the shy whispering ones and then there are the ones who just seem like they were born to be on the stage. Next comes listening to them all singing a verse and the chorus of a well-loved Christmas song. Proud parents comprised most of the congregation.  Us night time church goers comprise only about 25 people on average.  There were 15 kids in the play and they had parents and grandparents present.  Family pride still counts.

With about eight inches of snow on the ground, and it is not officially winter, with the smell of pecan rum cakes cooking in the kitchen and with the coming of the Christmas play it really is the height of the season.  There are seven days, one week left, in this the season of light.  I guess I will try and find some of the spirit tonight.

Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Awaiting the Cold Winter of 2016-2017



Out the window the view offered is a grey day.  Clouds are low and heavy laden with moisture.  Prognosticators of the weather say the snow will now come and will come at the state hard. 

Slightly west of here in two days the snow will cover you calves up to your knees.  Here our story is the powder might cover our shoe tops.  Prognostications of accumulation can be wrong; living in the north for even a short period you learn.  You prepare for missed guesses at what will fall and how fast it will fall.  A slight change in the wind speed and we will be deep in it.  A slight change in an angle of approach and the new snow blower in my garage will be a necessity.  Winter is now come.

Once I loved this place with all my heart and all my being.  Once I thought this place was an exemplar of all that was right in my country.  We were a place of heart and of four seasons. I still regard the environs and the people among some of the finest.  Folks here are hospitable and the land is beautiful.  Forests and lakes and large expanses where you have elbow room. Folks here still have some politeness left, although the influence of hundreds of channel of cable showing bad, nay awful behavior, has worn off some of the veneer of propriety that once predominated. 

My heart is no longer bound here because we have allowed our lesser selves, our petty selves to take the reins of our government. It is a shame because while I can appreciate a conservative, almost libertarian, view of the role of government that is not what we have.  What we have is a group of people promoting the self-interests of small segments of the population.  Instead of mandating strict equality the members of our house and senate are picking winners and loser and are creating a tiered system of social and economic classes.


I used to enjoy the snow. This year I will endure the snow.  My guess is that I will endure the next four years