Today it is snowy and cold and as happenstance would have it (or google connecting the dots) one of Mary Oliver’s poems popped into my feed about the snow. As I read it, I was struck by how much it felt like a poem of grief if only a few lines were changed.
So, here is my edit.
The grief - like snow began slowly. a soft and easy sprinkling of flakes, then clouds of flakes in the baskets of the wind and the branches of the trees --- oh, so individual and unique. We walked through the growing stillness, as the flakes prickled the path, then covered it, then deepened as in curds and drifts, as the wind grew stronger, shaping its work less delicately, taking greater steps, over the hills and through the trees until finally, we were cold, and far from home. We turned and followed our long shadows back to the house, stamped our feet, went inside, and shut the door. Through the window we could see how far away it was to the gates of April. Let the fire now put on its red hat and sing to us. NOVEMBER BY Mary Oliver - slight changes by SJF
I will admit that in the winter of my grief I freely took to warmer climates of friends and family, often traveling like a snowbird to the refuges where my soul was out of the harsh climate that felt like the long winter that never ends.
I’d say my “April” came much later, but like spring, my heart did feel the warmth of a changing season. I’ll try to recount that particular transformative day in another post.
Happy Thanksgiving to all. I am grateful for all I have and continue to experience.
Love to all.
Sally