This is the fourth time it's happened this winter The fire is sparking ("Put on another log to dull the flames") The wind, whipping up chaos outside, conspires with the moon to plaster open our eyes, and tangoes with the red of the streetlight to foreground the terror, the dramatic pull to this scene like the beginning of a barfight. But all you notice is the snow.
Captivating Slush, like the wondrous stupid glow of children's television ("Close the door quickly, it's below zero outside!") My chest wakes up to the sleeky bitterness of it, gentle but rousing, like the critique of a crush taunting the back of your neck, but in reverse.
You've said that last line, and it's the response of everyone who can't savor what they most anticipate, the arrival of the thing itself cast aside for something mundane like safety. The thing itself for you is watching snow, and now you gladly push it away.
Life is so unpredictable, yet so callously routine. To live in seasons is to be constantly surprised at things exactly how you've seen them before. It's not emotions that frighten us, emotions are hand-me downs, the old favourite band t-shirts of experience, often ones we've worn before. It's the feelings that surround emotion that we shunt out, that we tipex over in our journals of memory, our synaptic splints. The tears of children who never turn back to confront their tormentor with their tears.
And so now I'm walking upstairs as a means of brushing off these notions ("For the love of ... make sure the bathroom window is closed") And I check my phone while debating how to spend the rest of my evening engaging with my phone while you rewarch American sitcoms, so cosy, your contentment as reliable as Irish wind Then I sigh and look out the Bauhaus insulting bedroom window Again I see the circus coloured tarpit the weather has made of our street And wait a minute, trying not to feel anything Because this is the fourth time this has happened This year.