First snow

Nov. 24th, 2004 01:48 pm
vaneramos: (Default)
[personal profile] vaneramos


It had been raining all morning. Suddenly the light from the window changed and the lick of tires on the street sounded grainier. I looked up from my book to see the roof of a house across the street coated in white.

At last this long, tired year has pulled the coverlet, turned over, preparing for sleep. With a startle of white, it plunges into dreams. The world transmutes, blinds, softens, sinks like a dull drunkard in the gutter. The book of old secrets closes at last. Air changes. Sound muffles, a throng of mittened hands clasped over ears.

I'll set aside my faded yellow hiking boots and pull out the tall black ones with weary old lining that barely keeps my feet dry. It's a time of beginnings when even beginnings are tired. I don't want to go this way, but unwillingness submits to pessimism; closes the ice gates of opportunity.

There's too much beauty to shut it out. Too much comfort in a warm mug of coffee on a winter morning with a warm cub at my shoulder. Too much pleasure in an excuse to roll over on Saturday and make love for another hour. What am I complaining about?

I'm complaining about darkness and cold. Winter light lies on the ground with darkness in the sky. It's the universe card inverted, when roots go to sleep and hair falls out. It's a premonition of death, and symbol of dreams. Magic takes over when we shut our eyes and bury ourselves in the earth. There will be music in the wind: voices of sparrows clamouring. Now life leaves messages on the ground, stories about scavenging in the bare, cold core.

This snow is late. Less than a month, then the earth will turn and our vantage on the sun will change. We'll spin our headlong journey to the heart of light again. I shouldn't be so greedy: everyone needs light, everywhere. But it seems a waste when you look at the southern hemisphere and realize how much is ocean. All that light falling on squids and plankton.

Scientists have started a billion dollar research project to chart them all, expecting to find two million new species by the end of the decade. Lucky little species, teeming through a warm ocean where I would like to be, maybe rolling on soft sand somewhere, spreading seed along the beach. I want hot seas of love, but must settle for doing it in a northern bed. It would be heartless to deprive all those fishes and stinging nudibranchs. I'll have my day in the sun.

Time to deck the house with lights, pinpoints pressed against the fabric of night. I'll squeeze through the needle eye into a dream where light is forever and we never face darkness again.

Date: 2004-11-24 11:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poetbear.livejournal.com
"All that light falling on squids and plankton."

no light was wasted in the operation of this planet!
most of our oxygen comes from the Southern Hemisphere, Van.~paul

Date: 2004-11-24 12:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vaneramos.livejournal.com
I hope you're not taking me too seriously here. ;-)

Date: 2004-11-24 03:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poetbear.livejournal.com
naaaaaaaa!~paul

Date: 2004-11-24 11:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poetbear.livejournal.com
ps: are you still using your light to combat your SAD? ~paul

Date: 2004-11-24 03:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rsc.livejournal.com
This snow is late.

I'll say. We beat you by about two weeks.

Date: 2004-11-24 05:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vaneramos.livejournal.com
Yes, I saw photos. What a surprise!

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