You start the climb into the mountains like so many times before, hairpin turns you could do blindfolded, traffic unusually heavy on the other side of the railing. As your elevation builds, the rain turns to sleet turns to snow, how was it spring just days ago? You played baseball in a t-shirt, you're sure of it, but that memory is gone now. In Texas, they close the airspace and open it again, another memory made questionable. What you think you saw, you did not see, move along.
By morning, the finest layer of white lingers across the fields, while raindrops dance in puddles around it, the mountains obscured by lingering cloud cover. It's not enough to save the desert come summer.
It turns out to be too hard, as we age, to know what's the right move. Stay in the boiling pot, hope the waters recede? Cut your losses and build something new? They didn't teach you this in school. Your parents never told you all your dreams might one day be quashed.
The cloud cover descends into the valley. The Answers are hard to come by. It isn't over till it's over.
