So here we go again. My second blog in the history of my blog. This is monumental for me. A second blog may just make me an official blogger? No.
What I was thinking about winter is: Ew!!
It's gray and lonely and not at all, on any level, fun to drive in (especially when one commutes from South Haven to Grand Rapids such as I do everyday). Salt is everywhere. As much as my poor car doesn't like salt, I am doubly sure my poor pup's paws dislike it even more. I have pondered buying them little snow booties but thought twice when I realized I could be the obnoxious dog lady that dresses her Lab/Golden/Pit mixes in foo foo dog sweaters and buys them doggie boutique biscuits. No, I couldn't possibly do that to them (the booties that is). The lack of greenery or birds singing or crickets out my window on a quiet summer evening is nearly too much to bear.
Shocker: Winter may quite possibly be one of my favorite seasons. Eeeeeee!!! I know, am I crazy?! Here's why. I connect to the season's metaphorically. In the summer I am active and sunny and happy. In the winter I am melancholy in a way that opens me up to pieces of myself that are seemingly lost, or the parts, perhaps, I need to "die" to, in the same way that nature has to die to be reborn again in the spring. Enduring a winter makes spring in all of its infantile beauty seem so wonderful! Would I really appreciate that beauty if I didn't go through a season of gray? Maybe it's the same way with humanity. Maybe sometimes we have to experience pain, loss and suffering to appreciate all of the good and wonderful things in our lives. Or maybe spring is just a simple reminder that the gray won't last forever. That there is hope, and hope is enough to get us through, moment by moment, those periods of darkness. Maybe the seasons, for humans, is a way for us to let go and start anew. Maybe?
Who knows, I am just wondering aloud. I have to sit here and think about these things, otherwise winter will BEAT me down! And believe me, waking up everyday at 6:00a.m.-ish to walk Walter and Gustav when the whole world is fast asleep, and it's cold, windy and wintery outside (and I mean COLD), causes me to really think about winter. And note that I love these little guys so much that I would get up at 3:00a.m. and walk them in a blizzard to Greenland and back!
Winter near Lake Michigan is quite extraordinary! It will be hard to leave this simple, slow wintry pace of living when I move back to Grand Rapids (giving up the fireplace will be the most difficult). I finally put an offer in on a small white house on a quiet street very close to downtown, just minutes from work. Obviously this isn't the ideal place for me since I want a house with acreage and a beehive along with a couple of goats and chickens running around, and room for a barn where I can have a horse and rescue lots of dogs. BUT it's a good stepping stone for me. I can still have a garden (I will have to learn how to plant things and buy all of the necessary gardening tools), and possibly an urban chicken, and it will teach me a little bit about home owning since I literally know nothing. I will also have to learn how to start a lawn mower (it's really not my fault that my dad was anal about straight lines in the grass when I was a kid!).
But I digress. After many attempts to placate my disdain for winter, my conclusion is this: Winter is not bad.
