It's the first blizzard in ten years, the mayor says. You look back to remember but find that you'd escaped the city for unpronounceable upstate hamlets, remember how the floor creaked as you considered the distance between hearts. It feels like so many lifetimes ago.
You wake up early, too early, the radiators heaving with responsibility, you have to open all the windows, turn on the fan, throw your covers aside. An old routine. Your windows are bright white, a wall of snow, you can't be mad about such a blissful reminder that we are only very small in the face of something very big. The snow rises as it falls, a delicate dance of giant flakes, accompanied by the soundtrack of shovels in the street. We are reduced to our physical bodies. Late last night, I trekked out into it, couldn't miss the chance at feeling myself dissolved into tha air. A perfect crunch under my feet, a stillness that only arrives with snow, the sudden droppping of masks between strangers. Like recharging a self that grew up in this, that's been too urbanized to seek it out but that knows deep down this is what made you.
I cannot help but think it's time for the country again.
