And then, suddenly, instantaneously, this morning my southern view from the kitchen window turned from this colorful scene, which has been unchanged for several weeks:
To this, a Dicksonian still life created by a completely unpredicted and clandestine snow:
My front (northward) view this morning was no different in tone or despair, a world untouched yet by human or dog and bland and frigid, converted in an instantaneous, almost magical shift from autumn to winter, regardless of the date on my human-created calendar.
And now I'm relegated to joining my garden's Rip Van Winkle by awakening to a world changed, transformed both in appearance and liveliness, as cold and dead and hard and outright unwelcoming today as it was warm and sunny and vibrant yesterday. I begin a winter inside, quiet weekends and periods of staring out the windows, sleeping under an opened book just as my cement friend outside. It will be some time before I venture outside again to work and play, to smell and run my fingers through warm dirt, to plant life and nurture its growth. I sleep and wait inside, hopefully not for the 20 years of Irving's tale, but at least fretfully waiting until the world changes back, awaiting a new year of life reborn.