How much can I write about snow? It seems every time we get a glimpse of green
and warmth it gets smothered in a parfait of ice and snow. Just Friday I hopped over puddles and felt
too hot in my winter jacket while I ran errands around Squirrel Hill. And now, today, I wake to the sound of plows
clearing a fresh cover of snow from the parking lot outside my apartment
window.
Today is Sunday and, lately on Sundays I’ve started to wear
my glasses rather than waste a new pair of contacts. This takes a little getting used to each
weekend since my contacts prescription is a -5.00 and my glasses a -4.50, the
level my eyes were about four years ago when I bought the frames. But I have no idea what exactly this means
other than my inability to distinguish details of items more than six inches in
front of my face without either as a filter.
Normally this difference in prescription is fine, I squint a
little more and rely on my peripherals a little less. I don’t drive even though my eye doctor tells
me I’m able to. And aside from the time
spent in my natural place I don’t often leave the apartment.
Today, however, as I walk the route to the garden it is
snowing. A light dust that falls in slow
motion. It clings to my hair like the
stuffing of my patched-up down comforter.
It hits me out of trees as though we are locked in a one-sided snowball
battle. Buries my tall witch hazel like
one of the low-lying ferns.
Mostly the snow is attracted to my glasses as though they
were the windshield of my dormant SAAB (which is currently buried in 16 inches
of New Jersey snow). Whether I’m walking
the path or still and observant, the clumps of snowflakes gather on my smudged
lenses. The warmth of my face creates a
defroster effect that causes the clusters to melt almost immediately. I am left looking through a warped window,
the kind that looks as though it might be made of liquid. The little bulbs on of the witch hazel seem
magnified while the twigs and trunk seem far away. If I wait long enough before cleaning my glasses
on the sweater hidden beneath my jacket, my surroundings completely
disappear. I am left to see the world as
I would from the back seat of my parent’s Volvo in the rain. The passing background is gone in a misted
blur. I focus my eyes on the racing
drops, betting against myself on which will reach the bottom first and
internally cheering for my winner. This
race is much shorter than those down the car’s window yet no less exciting.
This doesn’t happen when I walk through the rain in my
glasses, with my head down I can usually make it through the weather without
needing to clean them. But in the snow,
it doesn’t matter where I look, the swirling crystals are attracted to the lenses.
They find their way through my scarf and
hair, around my bent head to where my glasses slide off my nose.
The promise of warmer weather later in the week doesn’t fool
me, I know there will be more snow before spring is here to stay. But in the mean time I’ll have to work on
more ways to talk about snow.
Great extended metaphor going on in the fourth paragraph! Glasses as windshield, face as defroster, etc. Would be an awesome idea for an essay at some point if you could really push it.
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ReplyDeleteI loved this idea of blurred vision and losing details. I wonder if for one of your blogs, you could take your glasses and contacts off and experience your spot in a whole new way. Let your other senses take you and don't rely so much on vision. Now I feel like doind that myself!
ReplyDeleteReally cool way to view your place and garden - I love the idea of what it means to have vision that doesn't produce a crisp picture of nature. Cool visuals - and I love that you would play games like the racing raindrops. I also like to do that :)
ReplyDeleteGreat opening line. We are all writing about snow to some degree. Thank you for taking us from the melted snow on your glasses with the wrong prescription to riding in the car looking at the world in a "misted blur" to walking in the rain. It was a nice trip.
ReplyDeleteBorrow my snow in america book if you still need more ways to talk about snow!
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