Wednesday, August 29, 2012

It Always Happens This Way



Every year, the end of summer brings with it a uniquely familiar laziness; a heavy sleep and slow pace brought on by too many heat-stricken days. Our senses remember this annual dance as we unconsciously adapt—physically, mentally, emotionally—to the next phase. The year begins, always, with the weary exposition of a frigid winter, encouraging us to move with anxious feet through the refreshing rhythm of bright spring mornings and bursts of color in rebirth. We're fully awake now, which means that the journey can really begin. The livelihood of summer is paved with unstructured activity and anticipated busyness, always pulling, never ceasing. Then, as promised, the heightened energies of summer build to their inevitable climax, sending us full of tired relief into the denouement of cooler, welcomed, autumn nights.

Our internal watch keeps accurate time; it knows the signs of passing seasons, made obvious by changes in weather and light and smells in the air. No matter the difference in our lives from year to year, this friendly, built-in timeline remains constant. It is a comfort.

The calendar may not say so, but summer is drawing to a close. That is, the "summer" that lasts from mid-June to Labor Day and is full of neighborhood adventures, chlorine-soaked hair, and afternoons spent napping on the living room sofa.



In those days and weeks before school begins, as the high of summer is beckoned back to its den, we take every opportunity we can to blissfully doze through unhurried reading sessions... no matter how old we are. It helps not to have a job, of course. Ah, to be in school again...

It is my favorite time of year, the weeks when summer turns to autumn. This week marks the first part of that phase, and it is now that nostalgia has the strongest hold on me—when I lose myself in daydreams and mental bursts of images, moments, smells, and sounds from the past. There is a strange masochism that comes with cherished memories of being young... of being someone so incomplete.

Though it's been years since I've experienced the transition from unbridled childhood freedom to regimented responsibility, my body doesn't forget. It might explain why these recent busy weeks of work have left me drained and aching for those last days of rest, some calm before the scholastic storm. Yes, my work will continue as it has been; the approaching autumn will not alter my routine.

I will sit at my desk and plug away from 8-5 in the comfort of my home. I will cook dinners and share drinks with my love, feeling old but happy in our insistence to stay in and watch movies, escaping to Tara, the Australian Outback, or the prison cells of England. I will explore this world and decorate my life with limited funds.

I will play with, laugh at, and love my dog for reminding me what it feels like to be unconditionally adored.



Still... all the while I will remember the soccer practices under cloud kingdoms and the distinct smell of childhood autumn, where the scent of wet grass and dry leaves meet. I'll remember the first days in a new desk at the start of a new school year, and the amnesia that comes from a summer of abandon: children who were once so anxious to leave the classroom always return with a joy and passion for new-found knowledge... and school supplies.

Autumn approaches and I once again get this way. Nostalgic, full of longing yet comforted by contentment. Perhaps I'll write about it every year, just one more cog in the clockwork of seasons. Perhaps I'll write about it every year to try and capture the complex feelings and memories linked to summer's end. Perhaps I'll write about it every year until I get it right.


*Images property of The Sleepy Peach

2 comments:

  1. Beautifully described, sugar. I feel it acutely right now, too. Plus, that photo of Ennis KILLS me <3

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  2. Very poetic, Stace! I definitely feel this, particularly this year. Probably because it's the first time in 4 years where I actually get to -- partially -- experience "going back to school in the Fall." And it is a wonderfully strange feeling, walking through campus, watching all the hustle and bustle from students who have yet to experience that 'time away' in the real world. It sort of makes me treasure my school-centric days, and wish that I had more than 2 of them per week!

    At least this year, you can live a little vicariously through Jon, and maybe even go with him to sit in on a class once! That can be fun! =)

    I love you, and I love your dumb-face dog.

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