Around five-thirty this morning, I
looked out the window and saw white. Just as the trusty television weather
folks had predicted, a winter storm rolled through overnight. It dropped some
inches of snow, although about ten fewer inches than one sensationalist
weatherman suggested might be possible a couple of nights ago.
It was a messy snow, the kind
accompanied by fierce winds whose currents deposit drifts in a seemingly random
pattern. Six inches here. Two feet there. Bare pavement over there. Some of
that snow ends up stuck in the window screen and makes things look much worse
than they actually are, but I could still tell it sucked.
But I did my duty and bundled up
and went outside to shovel. (Yes, shovel. No snowblower here.) As soon as I
started shoveling I realized that this was wet, heavy snow, unlike most of the
powdery stuff we’ve had this winter. (Close to eighty inches of it, by the way!)
And this wet, heavy snow, although nice for snowmen and snowballs, is a pain to
shovel. Perhaps the only good thing about it is that it scrapes up from the
sidewalk cleanly.
That’s what winter does to us. It
forces us to look at the bright side of shoveling heavy, wet snow on a day that
could have just as easily been seventy degrees and sunny.
The other thing that winter does is
make us thankful.
There have been many cold days over
the past few months when I’ve been outside with three layers of clothes, a
frosty beard, and partially numb fingertips, trying to find a place to throw
the latest inches of snow. The flakes came so fast and so often in weather so
cold that I began to run out of room to put it. Piles at the end of my driveway
grew taller than me, and a four-feet-high, twenty-feet-long snow wall separated
my driveway from my neighbor’s. I watched the games in Sochi confident that if
shoveling were an Olympic event I’d practiced enough to medal this year.
Sometimes the only thing that kept
me from becoming a less-crazy version of Jack Torrance (“All work and no play
makes Jack a dull boy”) and stabbing at the mountainous piles of snow with my
shovel while screaming obscenities was the thought that spring had to arrive
sometime. And when it did, I’d enjoy it even more than in previous years thanks
to the lousiness of this winter.
I think there’s something to that.
Those of us who live in cold weather climates and have to suffer through months
of weather forecasts that elicit such pitiful responses as “At least it’s only
a few inches,” or “At least it’s above zero” enjoy the warmth much more than
those who are in it year round.
Those jerks in warm weather locales
don’t even appreciate what they have. “I’ve never seen snow,” they say, as
though snow was a leprechaun and they had to see it to believe it. Well come on
up, you warm weather wimps, and take a look at what we have here. Drive in it,
shovel it, cancel plans because of it. Then maybe you’ll keep your mouth shut!
Winter is exercise. It’s what we
have to do so we can enjoy summer, which is pizza and cheesecake. And we’re
tougher because of it. We’re strong and lean and our pizza and cheesecake
tastes better than theirs. They’re soft and lazy because they do nothing but
eat pizza cheesecake. They do no exercise.
Figuratively speaking of course.
It could be that I’m just jealous
of warm weather places, but I don’t think so. I can complain about winter (hey,
you do it to!), but even as I shiver in my car as I drive to get a gallon of
milk at nine o’clock at night, I know that spring will be so much better
because of it. Someday I’ll have the windows down and my arm hanging out as I
drive to get that milk. The snow will be a distant memory. The reassuring scent
of a distant skunk (an animal that has enough sense to spend the winter in a
den and wait for spring) will permeate the air. The sound of cicadas and
crickets will mesmerize me.
And maybe then I won’t be so angry
at the warm weather people.
Until next winter.
You had me at cheesecake.
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