The Weight of It

I felt differently about yesterday’s snow after being out in it. I felt the weight of it. Though it lacked the heft of snowcrete, it was heavy and wet, which is why it clung so fetchingly to limbs and branches. After shoveling it for 30 minutes, I could feel it in my back and legs.
This is more observation than complaint, proof that the landscape has its way with us — that it marks us, just as we mark it. Before I breached the white surface with my orange shovel, I noticed the tracks: fox, I believe, and a disturbed area around the ground cover, pawed by deer hungry for foliage.
We all wanted something: food in the animals’ cases and a clear driveway in mine. Movement and sustenance — twin aspirations that drive us all.








