Monday, January 15, 2024

The Miracle of Snow

 

 The Miracle of Snow   

A short-lived serenity creeps quietly
  into her neighborhood as a blanket of snow
     deeply coats the broken sidewalks, the gutted asphalt,
        the debris, the strewn trash and waste, the grass-
           less lawns, the prostrate, still human forms that will not
               survive the frigid night.

The abandoned dwellings, made serene by the white snow,
seem less lonely. A single, hollowed tree becomes abstract
art worthy of critical accolades. The curling smoke from a
struggling fire of wood remnants rescued from an abandoned
dumpster warm hands and feet of men and women whose dimly
lit faces belie their hopelessness, who surround the trash fire
covered by found coats and pieces of old clothes surreptitiously
claimed from a cascade of items falling from a now snow-
coated trash bag caught on the edge of the local donation
bin; they amuse themselves at the fire in whispered chatter,
making their own temporal cheer via inner warmth courtesy of
                                      communal cheap whiskey.

The onlooking faithful believer, silhouetted in her window three floors up, thanks
 God for the peaceful scene. She sings a hymn of gratitude for the respite. No
 barking dogs, no anguished, smothered groans from the poor woman down
 the hall whose soul-less drunken boyfriend most nights relentlessly curses
 and punches his soul-less mate to relieve his tension; there are no screaming
 kids, no bongo man on the corner angrily beating his worn-out drums in
 impassioned expressions of sounds attempting to mimic music, no hissing
 cats, nor frightened bird breaks the silence. She wraps her rough hands
 around a hot mug of instant coffee, steaming the window, determined to
  imprint the scene in her mind as if her life depended on it. Because, for
  a couple of hours, she dwells in a clean, snow-painted paradise replete 
  with possibilities and prayed-for promises. 

For a couple of hours, it is an escape from nightmares that offers solemn
moments of joy and hope. And,   
for that couple of hours, she is not afraid.                           

 (c) jo 2024

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