Equinox blessings

The forecast is for spring. With last weekend’s snowfall measured in feet, the weather people are predicting high temps in the mid 30s to upper 40s for the foreseeable future. The storm of April 2018 haunts us with the guarantee that it still could snow, but not before this snowfall does quite a bit of melting over the next 10 days.

And so it seems a grand time to throw a spring equinox. We hereby declare that the sun must stay above the horizon longer each day than below for the next six months.

May chlorophyll-green invade and conquer the land. May the sun yield sunflowers and coneflowers and wildflowers beyond our ability to count. May birds nest and fledglings fly and children run and dirty their knees. May the land burst with bounty enough to keep our bellies full through the next season of winter, months from now.

Let bandshells in town parks everywhere sprout music of all shapes and sizes. The music of spring and summer is joy joy joy to the world — let heaven and nature sing!

I look across the yard and into the woods and see gray and white. The only color is from the lawn chairs, and even there you could not sit without brushing away a cushion of cold, wet white. But last Saturday, before the storm, a fresh green glow was starting to emerge from the ground, and no doubt it waits beneath the snow and will be even greener after it quenches its thirst on the spring melt.

“Yeah, right, it sure looks like the first day of spring,” leers the cynic. But he can’t deny the truth: It is, indeed, the first day of spring. We survived another winter, and the season of light is upon us.

Step by step

My iPhone tells me I took 5,906 steps on Wednesday, the first time in a very long time that I reached my informal goal of putting one foot in front of the other 5,000 times a day. It’s a modest goal indeed, as apparently a healthy goal is double that, but even then I am averaging fewer than 4,000 steps, for shame for shame.

The work of recovering from the big snowstorm continues, and it wasn’t until 10 p.m. that I could pause long enough to scribble in my journal and consider what to leave in this space for Thursday morning. I labored over my words for awhile, trying to be profound and encouraging and the like.

But then I looked at the Ray Bradbury quote I saved off a meme a few days ago: “The only good writing is intuitive writing. It would be a big bore if you knew where it was going. It has to be exciting, instantaneous, and it has to be a surprise. Then it all comes blurting out and it’s beautiful.” 

And so I said to myself, “Self, set the journal aside, pick up the laptop and see where it takes us.” And here we are.

Bradbury was talking about fiction, of course, of letting your imagination take the wheel and plunging into the story to make it up as you go. Maybe that’s why my novels have all stalled halfway through — I have a pretty good idea where they are going, and I’m trying to fit the story to reach those endpoints.

What if — what if — I just jettisoned the ending I have in mind and see where the story flows from where I left off? What if I’m stalled because the story doesn’t want to go where I want it to go?

And look, I’m fighting myself already. “I thought you wanted to talk about the aftermath of the storm or say something to encourage folks who are going through storms of their own,” my self-editor is telling me. “And here you are writing about writing fiction.”

It turns out that riding the storm out was the easy part. Wednesday morning I drove my space heaters up to Mary’s place because her furnace chose this moment to go on the fritz, and the repair guy hopes to get the replacement part by Friday at the latest. I couldn’t stay long because I have a system at my own home that has been malfunctioning since about the time the storm ended.

I was feeling cozy and smug — you may remember — about how modern life is somewhat miraculous because we can sit at the window watching the worst storm of our lifetime as if it was a fun reality TV show. It has taken me a few days to realize that even in modern times there’s work to be done after the storm subsides, because of what it leaves in its wake. 

The days after the snow stopped and the wind died down have proved to be far more challenging than waiting for the storm to pass. Hence, 5,906 steps on Wednesday or about double the distance I walked mid-storm. Who knew?

If the journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step, what begins with 5,906 steps? Could be quite a trip ahead.

(And now the photo of Dejah and Summer watching the sun set after the storm, which I chose when I was planning to be profound and encouraging, doesn’t really go with what I ended up writing. What the heck, it’s a cute picture. I’m using it anyway.)

Shiny

I discovered Firefly at the perfect time — late 2004, two years after the Fox TV network mishandled the brilliant science-fiction series, canceling it after only 11 of its 14 wonderful episodes were aired.

The show gained a significant following after it was released on DVD, gaining enough of a fan base to convince Universal to greenlight a movie that answered some questions and tied up some loose ends. That was when I found the show — about four months before the film, Serenity, came out.

I had time to binge-watch those episodes several times after falling head over heels the first time through. As I recall, I watched three episodes the first night, three episodes the second night, and eight episodes the third night. I concluded it was the best TV show I’ve ever seen, and I haven’t changed that opinion in 22 years.

And so I watched with interest earlier this month as Nathan “Malcolm Reynolds” Fillion released a series of videos in which he approached the other seven living stars of the show with the message: “It’s time.” “We’re doing this.” “I can’t do this without you.”

And I was distracted from the worst snowstorm of my lifetime by Sunday’s announcement that the eight original cast members are lending their voices to an animated revival of Firefly, which apparently will be set in the time between the last TV episode and the movie, which is good because two main characters die in the film.

Animation makes sense because all of the actors have gone on to other projects, including ongoing TV series, and also because, well, they’re all 24 years older than they were back then. Their voices are the same, but their faces mo longer look like they did between the last TV episode and the movie.

Everything is lined up to launch the cartoon except a network or streaming service to carry it. Fillion is shopping it around, and there’s a lot of enthusiasm from the fans. The last few nights I’ve been rewatching some of my favorite episodes — “Out of Gas,” “Ariel,” “Objects in Space” — and confirming that it’s still my all-time favorite TV show.

There’s always a chance that they won’t recapture the magic and the new stories won’t ring as true as the old ones. Perhaps some of the magic came from the mystique of being canceled with so many stories left untold.

Still, it will be a treat to see these beloved characters interacting in that rickety old spaceship again. I was in a movie theater for the first showing of Serenity, and (Lord willing) I will be in front of the TV set when the Firefly animated series premieres.

After the storm

8 a.m. Monday — blizzard warning

And now I have lived through the second and third biggest snowstorms ever recorded in these parts, and I can safely say they were the biggest and second biggest in any of our lifetimes. When the snow stopped falling and the sun came out Monday afternoon (and the wind did not quit until well into the night), 33 inches of accumulation had been measured in Sturgeon Bay and 26 inches in Green Bay — I am located exactly between those fine cities. In recorded history only the Great Blizzard of 1888 left more snow in its wake.

If you have to endure a monster snowstorm, it may as well be a historic one. This way I can tell future young whippersnappers, “I remember back in ’26, the snow and the wind got so wild they had to pull the snowplows off the road.” Yep, it was that awful on Monday morning. By sunset, though, we could actually see the sun in the sky as it went down.

About 1,200 homes did lose power in the storm, but summer windstorms have taken the electricity from tens of thousands in the past, so most of us have much to be grateful for now that we’re through the storm and into cleanup mode.

As if perhaps to remind me not to be glib about reaching the other side, I did have a couple of sump pump issues that kept me busy Monday afternoon and evening and may or may not be solved — I’ll know more by dawn’s early light.

Clearly I needed a reminder that two and a half feet of snow and bitter cold can wreak havoc with our cleverly designed devices like homes and roads and such.

God has granted us a few days above freezing to start melting this mess, but not until Wednesday. One day with a high of 20 and two nights in single digits will be more in line with the Wisconsin tradition that winter rarely departs until after the first day of spring, and then some.

In the middle of the storm

So far the storm is everything they said it would be. I am so grateful to be living in an era where, in the middle of the storm and as long as the grid holds, I can sit in comfort and watch and participate in a worship service in progress 20 miles away.

I’m still safe and warm Sunday night. I have shoveled the stairs to the backyard four times for the sake of my dogs — at 5:30 a foot of snow had filled in the path I had cleared four hours earlier. It seems the snow has tapered off but will be on and off most of the night until it resumes for several hours not long before dawn.

I have only stepped out front once, to take this photo shortly after 8 a.m., 24 hours after I took the picture of Summer and the bare front yard. I’m planning a third photo Monday morning to share for Tuesday.

I’ve stayed in touch with Mary by phone and the rest of the world by Facebook. When Starlink was installed earlier this month and the panel on the roof was pointed at the sky, I asked the guy what I should do if we get 10 inches of snow. “It has a built-in heater,” he said. Sure enough there’s been no interruption of internet service, and apparently there won’t be as long as I have electricity.

What a miraculous world we live in. It seems the last frontier we have to conquer is humanity’s hatred for one another, and even there we make slow progress all the time.

“The heavens declare the glory of God.” We do usually get one horrific storm at the end of winter — and this one may turn out to be the most horrific of all — but then, experience tells me, we’ll be greeting daffodils within a couple of weeks. That thought helps me maintain calm as I listen to the angry wind and the wind chimes jangling in the dark.

Every so often a vehicle passes on the highway above this home. I pray for everyone out in the storm, for safe passage and eventual shelter. It will be a blessing to see the end of this, which they’ve already dubbed “this historic storm.”

Calm before the storm

Saturday morning was beautiful in our neighborhood as Summer and I went for our constitutional. The sun was beaming in the sky; it was chilly but not unbearable, the kind of late-winter chill that has a faint promise of spring in the air.

The red-winged blackbirds and cardinals serenaded us as we walked up the hill, and they seemed to be heralding the first day of spring a week from now.

If I’m to believe the meteorologists, 24 hours from now (or as you read this Sunday morning), we will be in the early hours of a snowpocalypse, and this beautiful sunny panorama will be replaced by two or even three feet of snow under gray skies by Monday morning. It’s an idyllic and even archetypal calm before the storm.

I thank the Creator of the universe for giving us a glimpse of the other side of the storm, for that is exactly what Saturday morning was. I imagine this might be what the morning before The Flood was like, and Noah was able to keep the peaceful image in his mind and heart as the waters rose and the ark began to float.

We had 30 inches of snow one April weekend back in 2018. At least this storm has the courtesy to swoop in while the calendar is still set to “winter.”

Conversation with the neighbors

“What am I doing here? Why am I doing this?” He had stopped in mid-thought to contemplate the meaning of his very existence. He felt he had to know the reason why he was put on this planet, as if he had to have a Reason. Could it be as simple as what he was told — to love God and to love his neighbor, understanding that everyone and anyone was his neighbor? No, it was not just that imperative, it was to share that imperative with his neighbors — to share it with everyone and anyone.

It seemed too simple — wouldn’t people get tired of his constant repetition? “Oh there’s the one-note wonder again, he’s such a one-trick pony. ‘And now for my next trick, another variation on “Love God and love your neighbor, and did I mention that everyone is a neighbor?”’ Boh-ring.”

“I want to love my neighbor,” said one neighbor, “but THOSE PEOPLE don’t want to be my neighbors.”

“Love them anyway,” he said.

“Easy for you to say,” said another neighbor, “but what about HIM? You can’t possibly mean to include —”

“Oh, yes, I do,” he said. “Even he, with all his annoying and alarming proclamations and habits, even he is my neighbor, and I must love him if this is going to work.”

“There’s the flaw in your logic — ‘if this is going to work’ — but it can’t work unless everyone buys into it,” another neighbor insisted.

“No, that’s not true, either,” he said. “It starts with me, doing unto others, and one at a time, we all will love one another eventually.”

“That will take forever, long past our lifetimes,” said another.

“It has been more than 2,000 years now,” he admitted. “Still, there is more love in the world than there was 100 years ago, so it’s slowly working.”

Several neighbors scoffed. “That’s pretty slow progress,” two or three said simultaneously.

“The one who said it first did not say the world would change all at once,” he said.

“Yes, he did,” countered one wag of a neighbor, “something about ‘in a twinkling of an eye,’ as I recall.”

“That’s something else,” he said. “In any case, I have the answer to my original question. This is what I’m here for.”

“What is?”

“To have this conversation. Over and over.”

“Aren’t you bored?” asked a neighbor, “or at least incredibly frustrated?”

“Not yet,” he said, smiling. “I kind of love it.”