1/03/2009



PART 3

. . . With their seemingly endless pallet for similar patterns and colors, the woods of Winter can overwhelm the eye and confuse a person, and in the open woods it is not uncommon for someone to stray too far from the familiar and disappear as if into thin air. If you stay still for a but minute or so, the mind wanders, the senses heighten and then one begins to be hypnotized by the unfamiliar sensation of absolute awareness. Every single thing in its place.Without even a breeze to rustle twig upon stick upon leaf upon stick jutting from the ground, the park was profoundly, oddly, silent. All at once she felt a strange sensation, as if she were being watched, but there was nothing to be seen or heard, not a bird, not a squirrel—no one walking, jogging, no dogs crashing through the undergrowth, their owners far behind. . .


1/02/2009


PART 2

. . . In the afternoon after she’d taken a long, luxurious nap, a drowsy woman went for a walk on the long path that runs through the large park near her small house. It was cold but not so cold as to freeze the creek that ran like a thick black vein through the hardwood forest drained of color, like a meticulous, obsessive graphite sketch. There were a handful of others in the park but for the most part she was alone, and this solitude led her to daydream and wander further than she’d originally intended. . .


1/01/2009


PART 1

It had snowed New Year’s Eve. Not very much but enough to add the much-needed contrast to the wintry skeletons of trees that painted the region in mournful tones of gray and black. The sun had come out on New Year’s day, painful illumination for the boozy revelers who woke late, but a reminder for most that spring was months away and there would be surprises in store before the bleak month of January was finished. . .