Now is the time to appreciate the texture of the world.

The bones are laid bare, and they are stark and surprising, homely and lovely both.

Melody stops, allowing the rich basso continuo at last to be heard, sharp and clear.  Who knew all this other music was there all the time, constant beneath the prettier, more dancing notes of the other seasons?

Tiny nests curl in perfect spirals like water swirling down a drain.  Caches of olive-green mistletoe are revealed just in time for the holiday.  Squirrel superhighways among the interconnected branches become crowded at rush hour twice a day (just after dawn, just before dusk).

The lightning-struck branch, age-bleached, becomes a favorite scenic lookout point for winged friends.  Maybe it always was.

Wild Carolina rose hips glow like tiny Christmas ornaments in a Byzantine web of thorns and twigs.

Damp leaves cluster at the feet of lichen-painted boulders in a roofless art gallery.

Trees lean on one another for support.

(I know it is true.  I have witnessed it.)

Now is the moment to notice the no-longer noticed, to marvel at what has long ago ceased to be marvelous in our rushed and preoccupied and oh-so-efficient lives, to recognize that which supports us all along — without ever requiring our recognition.

It’s still a beautiful world, winter and all; isn’t it?

Namasté, y’all.

“We have really only that one light, one source for all power, and yet we must turn away from it by universal decree. Nobody here on the planet seems aware of this strange, powerful taboo, that we all walk about carefully averting our faces, this way and that, lest our eyes be blasted forever.”

– Annie Dillard, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek

So many of you still have your gardens under a heavy blanket of snow that I do sometimes feel a bit guilty, whining about not being able to get out and garden as I’d like by the end of February.  But we can all experience the sun now, and it’s fun to realize that we all regularly participate in this unacknowledged, universal taboo, in every season, on every continent, and at almost every latitude.

Of course excepting the Arctic Circle where human beings are now experiencing perpetual Polar Night or Polar Twilight.  I’m in awe of the psychological fortitude required to live out this season in such places.  Comparatively, I’m a total winter weakling.

Today the sun has been with us, but has not managed to overcome the deep chill in the air.  It’s so cold I’m back to all my January behaviors, wanting to hunker down inside with a meaty novel and a cozy blanket, even resorting to making a cup of hot chocolate once twilight settled in the hollow.  My current read is John Kennedy Toole’s A Confederacy of Dunces, although I do highly recommend the origin of the above quote, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek; both are winners of the Pulitzer Prize.

The cats seem to be responding to other signals somehow, spending as much time as possible outdoors, Booty traipsing back inside coated with shimmering mica dust, Leo bringing back the results of his renewed energy for stalking prey, and both of them beginning the infamous spring shed.  (Spring is truly the season where I heart my vacuum cleaner.)

And the garden, too, is responding to some cues I must be missing in this unseasonable chill.  The rosemary is perking up and possibly preparing to flower, the garlic shoots are suddenly reaching for the sky, and the recently-thinned radishes are fattening up, as F. verified with an impressive Daikon he sampled today.

One pea is even sprouting.  I’m hoping he’s the advanced outlier on a bell curve of peas that not only survived the snows and cold nights, but might feel right at home in such conditions.  Peas, you will remember, are my new vegetable to try growing in 2010, and as such I have no idea what to expect.  Our last recommended planting date for bringing them to maturity before the heat sets in was February 15th.

This one may be a freak who survived against all odds — or the sign that not all is lost.  Even so, if the peas fail utterly, I have other seeds to plant in their place.

In the garden, it is hard to lose it all; isn’t it?  The flow of life and possibility never ceases, even if we’re stuck contemplating it only in the mind’s eye while snuggled under a blanket.

“Spring has returned.  The Earth is like a child that knows poems.”

~Rainer Maria Rilke

I’ll bet you imagined it was an animal or bird that you would see peeking around the tree in this photo.  In fact, it is me, trying to get closer to a sweet and shy hellebore in bloom — without leaving the path.  I was very nearly on tiptoe by the end.

Click photo to see the full-sized image.

I do try to respect the rules at the Botanical Gardens, even when the most gorgeous flower is just out of reach of my point-&-shoot and no one is there to see me step out of line.  Sometimes this calls for enormous reserves of willpower.  And sometimes, as today, it results in an unusual effect in a photograph.  In this case, the thick, grey bark of the tree blocking my way became a textured edge that I actually liked when I saw it on the screen.

It made me think of how our very personal obstacles in life oftentimes become a pleasing part of the art we are creating with our lives.

But for heaven’s sake don’t tell me this when I am facing the obstacle, itself; I will just be annoyed.  Focused as I am on balancing on tiptoe, or busy considering where to place my feet next to somehow sneak by it, or contemplating bending the rules a little to get to where I desperately want to be, the idea that I will find this particular challenge somehow soul-beautifying in retrospect will not be appreciated.

I hope I remember precisely that last part the next time a friend asks me for my honest advice about a tough situation she’s facing.  And I hope I remember the first part when I’m the one in the hot seat.

Other than these thoughts, I have nothing more exciting to report than that spring is definitively here.  (That’s quite exciting, actually.)  I’ll tell you more about it tomorrow.  But it is here, really and truly… even though a deep chill still holds the land, too.

After a frost-bitten morning, I bundled up in a heavy coat and layers for my visit to the gardens, not expecting much to have changed since five days ago.  Yet plump buds and newborn blooms were lisping poetry wherever I looked, and the fierce winds began blowing away the cobwebs that winter had allowed to grow up in the corners of my soul.

Can both seasons be happening simultaneously?  Yes, I think they can.  Well, they are, no matter what I think about it.  Reality is so markedly subtle, continually defying categorization, despite everything we were taught in school.

I’m glad it does that.  It makes life so interesting; don’t you think?

This post originally published on Victory Garden Redux.

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