The morning began like many others.
Jarred awake by the shrill ring of an alarm clock, I crept
out of the covers and tried in vain to rub sleep out of my eyes. The tousled bed seemed mockingly inviting.
I had fallen asleep the previous night with a cold and clear
sky peeking through my window. Hours
later, a breathless pre-dawn air maintained that stillness. On that dark and silent winter hour, every
sound, every breath, every movement felt like sacrilege. Yet I dragged my feet to the kitchen and made
myself a cup of coffee.
Holding the warm cup of coffee between my palms, I walked up
to the window, wishing to savor a moment of silence before the madness of work hours
shattered it into a million pieces.
Gentle steam wafted off the cup and warmed my face, carrying
with it the aroma of coffee beans grown on the faraway slopes of ancient Guatemalan
volcanoes. I took a small sip and looked
outside. Instantly, all traces of sleep fell out of my
eyes.
Overnight, the landscape had changed.
‘Winter Wonderland’ is a term loosely tossed around to
describe any ordinary snow-covered landscape.
But what I saw outside my window that day was truly deserving of that name. Throughout the night, hoar frost had worked
patiently, coating every inch of surface exposed to the air. White was the color of the day.
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Frosted branches |
On an impulse, I decided to walk to work that day. It was a decision that changed my life.
It was still dark when I left home. As I made my way across the city, beauty greeted
me at every step. The sky was beginning
to glow with a pale light of early dawn.
Cold air hung thick and motionless.
Nothing stirred – neither a branch, nor a leaf. Everything was coated with pure white crystals,
still untouched by the grime of the day.
Dusted by this powder, pavements shimmered each time glimmers of light
drifted down in the darkness.
It was a moment that spelled timelessness. Yet I was aware that I needed to be somewhere
on time. Reluctantly, I hastened my
steps though all I wanted was to stay still and take in the surroundings. I longed to be part of that silence, without
disturbing the fragile magic that surrounded me.
Instead, I found myself rushing through it like a mindless brute
destroying that which it can never create.
Pedestrians walked past me in haste, seemingly oblivious to
the surrounding enchantment. After a
while, cars began to appear. Each pair
of beams tore through the silent darkness, dissolving its magic until it
transitioned into mundane. As I walked
on a bridge spanning over a half-frozen river, I turned my head to a side. At the end of the bridge, a narrow trail branched
off the road, leading down to the riverside.
I looked at my watch: there was still some time left.
I stepped off the road and on to the trail. It was like stepping into a different world –
a raw and achingly beautiful place, almost like a parallel universe that one
had to deserve before gaining access.
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Hoar frost |
I moved away from the bridge, away from the sound of
increasing traffic, and into the hushed silence of a pristine world. The pale fog that lay over the river and its
banks soon enveloped me into its fold. Gradually I began to discern sounds within
that silence. Sounds of ice melting on the
banks, warmed by the heat of a rising but still-hidden sun. Every now and then, a crack sounded, a chunk
of ice calved and fell in the water with a splash. It was a silent splash, an understated splash,
a splash in tune with the rest of the symphony.
Ice fallen in the river melted with a hiss, being touched by warmer
water, until it cooled the water but warmed itself… losing itself.
In the distance, tall buildings of downtown reared their
heads, exhaling smoke and steam into the air.
Their lighted windows glowed harshly, unnaturally. They promised warmth and comfort, safety and
security. But in exchange they claimed a
price. That price was freedom.
My spoken-for freedom stirred from its sleep that
moment. Lately, it had been stirring
uncomfortably often, making me question things that ought not to be questioned. Like previous times, I pushed it down
again.
Then, without looking at the watch, I knew it was time to
leave.
Walking on the trail again, I climbed back from the banks
and found the road I had left. I knew I
would reach work on time that day. I
knew I would honor my commitments.
Yet a corner of my mind knew something else: that the freedom
had stirred itself awakened that day; it had stretched; it was gaining ground. It would not be denied this time.
I knew I would leave my profession once my term was
over.
It was time to begin a new journey. And this
is a part of that tale.
Now when I walk the trails, grey buildings in the distance no longer intimidate me. Their lit golden
squares blink like fellow-conspirators, sharing the knowledge that freedom is
only a choice away.