It’s
snowing. I’m in my room writing about it, reminiscing about Christmases past
when the only seasonal white stuff was the whipped cream on Mum’s Boxing Day
trifle, or recalling one winter day when I stood with my father in the living
room and watched a rare flurry outside the window.
I
said, “Isn’t it pretty?”
Dad
growled, “I hate snow.”
It’s
definitely different when you don’t have to operate in it.
I
remember some winters when Mum would do a massive grocery shopping in response
to a menacing forecast. Once the kitchen was fully stocked, she would come into
the living room and announce, “Now it
can snow.” We’d all breathe a sigh of relief, knowing hearty soups and
fresh-baked baps were in the works no matter how frightful was the weather outside.
These
days, even on the west coast, snow seems an annual inevitability. I don’t
remember a recent winter without it; in fact, a major snowfall in the Before
Time prompted the Powers That Be to order laptops for all staff during the
computer refresh (admin staff typically received desktops) so we could work
from home on heavy snow days. The computers were also outfitted with VPN
access, and whatever technology was required to keep the system from crashing
was boosted to avoid a network catastrophe. (I wonder if our directors had a
communal premonition, as it sure came in handy when COVID hit.)
Used
to be that snow fell in January or February. Now it seems bent on wrecking
Christmas, or at least one’s Christmas vacation, by dumping before festive
preparations are complete. This year, the first round fell on November 7,
followed almost exactly two weeks later by a second round. I now have a
strategy to outwit the winter by either picking up my computer—my rig is left
at the office on weekends so it gets its updates on schedule—or keeping it at
home if it snows later in the week. It’s much less stressful to be on vacation,
though today’s snowfall is interfering with last minute Christmas shopping; not
mine, but everyone else’s, and that’s an extra stress on people already
teetering on the edge.
My snowmance continues, however, with images of hot tea, fat novels and cozy blankets. Ter suffers more, being prone to cabin fever long before I get restless. She’s never actually declared a loathing for it, but a snow advisory can rattle her until she’s able to restock the pantry. Then she emerges from the kitchen to announce, “Now, it can snow.”
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