Tuesday, July 07, 2009

Slow down


The forest around me is already beginning to take on the look of mid-summer. That surprises me a little. For one thing, the season is only two weeks old. For another, this region has not yet had a 90-degree day this year (Note: I am not complaining about this at all. I’m just mentioning it because it’s highly unusual). So I wouldn’t have expected the woods to be taking on that vaguely dull shade of green, nor for the wild grains at the forest edges to have ripened to shades of brown just yet. But both those things are happening.

The forest has entered the time of year where growth and change slows down dramatically. It’s not really a static time—no time is in the natural world—but it feels pretty close to that. After the blinding speed of spring’s explosion, any slowdown is going to feel very slow, much slower than it actually is.

In any event, that point of slowdown, both the perception of it and the reality, is here. Ideally, I should be a little like the forest and slow down myself. In spring, a morning of not paying attention or a day lost to rain can mean I might not see something for another full year. Not now. Whatever it is will still be there tomorrow.

But the habit of running around is hard to break, at least for me. Sitting still? What’s that? Sometimes it feels as though sitting still for five minutes means 20 other things won’t get done. Eventually, usually, I am able to down shift my gears, occasionally. Hasn’t happened yet. I’m still working on it. Maybe a 90-degree day would help.

4 comments:

Grizz………… said...

Well, if you're like me, a 90-degree day—or even worse, several 90-degree days in a row—melts me into a useless blob. I seek to remain in the shade, in some variation on a horizontal position, icy drink nearby, from at least mid-morning until the first lightening bug begins to flash.

Unlike you, we've had a few such days already here along the river. But we've recently been shivering through a repeat of March, except with July's lush leaves. Yesterday it finally made it back to more summery weather—though still barely 80 degrees. Not that I'm complaining, either; it can stay in the 65–80 degree range for the next six months so far as I'm concerned; I just need to know whether to dig out the flannels again.

Carolyn H said...

Gris: I'm not a fan of 90 degree days either. The mornings are in the upper 50's, afternoons haven't reached 80 for a while. Nice weather, low humidity but it just seems odd.

Likely cool weather now will mean September will be sweltering, maybe October too.

Carolyn H.

Cathy said...

I'm still lush and green up here, no signs of getting dull.However, all this green is getting tirersome.

And of course, I got to deal with on and off T-storms all day with another on it's way here.

Is fall yet?

Pablo said...

We get times just like this in August. I imagine that Nature starts having second thoughts about the wild growth of spring.