When you blow from the North, the mercury shivers, piling your snow drifts high before my door; we skate on roadways and reclaim our trash cans blown down the block; you shift all my shoveling back to where there is none.
Oh, Michigan wind, you blow god’s breath, your roar drowns out the game on the radio; you send summer leaves to spinning and pages to flipping, blowing the sugar-beet stink from the cool, humid air, showering the rooftops with broken brown sticks, making the branches above click like tap shoes and drop seeds into my glass of lukewarm beer.
When the silence is set and the darkness is met with uncertain regard, your winds steady the nerve like a quick shot of whisky stinging the throat. I weigh myself down with concrete resolve hoping to stay grounded and not blown around with the leaves, the trash, the sound.