She pops out for a day, shows a little leg, smiles demurely, and
disappears again, leaving her anxious suitors to suffer through more cold and wet. It’s hardly any wonder that the symbol of
weather should run hot and cold, but sheesh – enough is enough.
The stupid groundhog predicted an early spring, but he didn't say it would come all at once. What is a groundhog, anyway? It’s a
big rat. Set a trap, somebody.
Even more than
usual, our weather pattern looks
like a heartbeat on an EKG. It reminds me the old days, when I walked to school barefoot, in a raging
blizzard every morning and a blistering heat wave in the afternoon. (Uphill both ways, blah blah blah.)
I really should get around to admitting I only lived two blocks from school.
As a result of the bouncing weather, some people say they'd rather it just stay cold all the time. Their brains are still frozen. Saying cold all the time instead
of warm some of the time is like saying that, since you can’t eat 24
hours a day, you’d rather just starve. To carry the heavy comparison further, I’d rather weigh
300 pounds but be alive than be the first member of my family to
voluntarily starve to death.
Most of my best winter photos are taken from inside. I care less about glare than I do about frostbite. |
Summer now goes by much more
quickly than it used to, and winter – strange as our recent winters have
been – lasts much longer. When I was a kid, the
average summer lasted eighteen months. Seriously. I would go out to play
after breakfast, and wouldn’t come in again for three days, just in
time for lunch. The summer when I turned nine lasted for over six years.
It’s a science-fictiony mystery, but there you go. We went down to
Kentucky for a two week vacation that lasted so long we had to cut down
trees to get the car back on the road.
And it never got hot.
Kids could wake up in the hospital with two IV’s in their arms to
rehydrate them, and have no idea they were ever overheated. Then they’d
go home and run back outside again. Sure, most of us didn’t notice the
cold, either, but we sure noticed when we started getting feeling back
into our limbs. It was like getting a power pinch from our least
favorite aunt – all over.
Isn't this fun? SO much fun. Later I'm having hot chocolate and a good cry. |
Even the bad things about summer are
proof that summer is good:
Bugs? Hate ‘em. But why do they come out
during the spring? Because during winter they’re dead. Everything’s
dead. It’s a dead season. Mother Nature is dead – the first lightning
storm of the spring is like a giant defibrillator, starting her heart
back up.
No lawn mowing during winter. Why? Grass is dead. No
poison ivy during winter. Why? Dead. Snakes? Dead. No spiders during the
winter. (Spiders are not bugs. Bugs are just bugs – spiders are evil.)
Even spiders know dead when they see it, although many think it looks
like the bottom of my shoe.
Hot and humid is unpleasant, I get
that, but nobody's car ever slid into a snowbank
because the sun was shining too much. No poor match girl ever froze to
death under a shade tree during an Independence Day
celebration.
Tornadoes? Terrible things, mile-wide vacuum cleaners. But blizzards have covered half the friggin’
country. Besides, no matter how strong it was, no meteorologist ever
mentioned “tornado” in the same sentence as “wind chill”.
Winter even smells dead – spring smells of
fresh cut grass, and lilacs, and that earthy scent that comes with a
warm summer rain. And yes, it also smells of hot asphalt, and dairy
farms, and sweat, but that’s a small price to pay for driving down a
country road with the window open and breathing deeply as you pass a
cornfield.
Pretty, isn't it? And DEAD. |
Almost everything’s green, with patches of other
bright colors like spotting a forgotten twenty dollar bill.
Green is life. Winter has no color: It’s black and white and dead all
over. I could also go for the cliché and mention the sounds – birds,
frogs, insects, all more relaxing than the sound of sleet on siding, or
furnaces kicking on. Finally, lest we forget, the feel of walking around
in shorts and shirtsleeves, without the accompanying frostbite.
Warmth makes everything a little better. Sure, you can’t store your
frozen goods on the back porch, but that’s a small price to pay for
opening the window and breathing real air.
So come on out, Mother Nature, don’t be a tease. And don’t bother bringing your winter coat.
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Remember: When wrapped in plastic, books make good umbrellas. Use hardcover.
I beg to differ- winter rules.
ReplyDeleteAh, people who spend too much time out in winter often say that. It's a condition called ... let's see ... frost brain. :-)
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