Tag Archives: winter

Finding Serenity in Snow

Rough, rectangular bricks made an uneven pattern in the small enclosure, edges sticking up and others cracked in half, but the groundwork lay beneath the powdery cold, partly covered. The blanket rested undisturbed, pristine and layered. Rarely anyone or anything ventured into this abandoned space. The children grew up and left, returning sporadically, but still ignoring the basketball net replaced several years back to entice its use.

The chain link fence bowed in areas from remaining upright for so long, bullied by the heavy, insistent snow. Deep gouges edged into a tree trunk like chapped lips, a lost limb appearing cauterised from its side. Young girls swung hula hoops around the branch in earlier years, and a brass bird-cage before they were born. The garage door also reflected age and wear, cracked in places once painted annually in shady spring afternoons.

The woman walked on the brick, boots sinking into the ice and frost. She paused and looked, really saw. She breathed in the memories slowly, closing her eyes, then opening them to attune herself to the moment and empty her mind.

She considered her hesitation in visiting this sacred space at first, afraid to notice any oddities or differences from the carefree days of her childhood. Yet, she did not dare to walk over the forward steps and continued despite her fears.

Nothing stirred except the winds blowing through the frozen pine needles; a torn rag somehow caught in the tree branches above and waved at her to move ahead. Her methodical procession led her to circle the yard with care. She thought about Lao Tsu and wondered if she was a closet Taoist; the internal chatter ceased and she felt purified, whole, and at one with her surroundings. She felt the air alive with God and hope, pushing away the darkness from the past few months.

There were strange things present; things she did not understand or want to know. Some changes amused her.

Other alterations suggested loneliness, death, and lost companionship. She remembered hearing her grandmother’s laughter, the squeaking line of laundry hung to dry in the summer heat and playing in a turtle shaped sandbox. She felt warm, despite the outward chill and knew to leave when her cheeks hurt from the cold and happiness.

She saw herself as a six-year-old, picking fennel from the garden, washing the bitter leaves with a hose and eating it to appease her proud grandfather. She recounted good memories- hopscotch games with friends, feeding her dog saltine crackers so he would lick her face and make her laugh, and building an island for a Lord of the Flies project as a middle schooler.

I will return after  the winter gives way to weeds and wildflowers, she vowed, turning back down the alleyway, but only after buying a basketball.

Are those UGG® boots?

An innocent question, sure, but I pride myself on avoiding those expensive, bulky sponges.

“I wouldn’t wear Uggs to work,” I reply and laugh, “And I don’t like them.”

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no neve :(

so there wasn’t a storm, as predicted. makes me sad.

I’m falling into line with traditional gender roles today – washed and hung up laundry (some by hand!), washed dishes, and scrubbed the bath tub. I’m currently soaking a new brita filter because my mini fridge soaked up the smell of beef + red pepper from Chinese take-out the other night. It had a detrimental effect on my water pitcher, but it needed a good scrubbin’ and revitalizing anyway; getting rid of the funky, greasy aftertaste was just an excuse for me to get around to it.

 I hope it snows. Soon.

Tonight

the glacier binds
rotating wheels
and metal against
ice in a twisted
courtship that skips
introductions
down to consummation.

in the glare
of streetlights,
goosebump tickled
skin embraces breathy
sighs of frozen
frustration and rubber.

we get out and hiss
obscenities
that spin and float
somersaults along
each crest
of chilled air.

we are angry commuters
after a fender bender
with Time.
“Don’t mess with us!
We will punch you out
before punching in late”,

but brass knuckles
against packed water
only leads to ragged skin
and bloody snow.

So the scraping stabs
of shovels echoed
melodies that woke
the neighbors,
but we dug ourselves
out before the blizzard hit.