There’s
something about November—the world (at least in the Northern Hemisphere)
getting ready for winter; leaves have finished running through their October
particolored changes and are being blown all around by the winds; menus shift
from salads and grilled fish to boeuf bourguignon and roasted potatoes.
The
weather here in the District They Call Columbia has completely bought into the
pre-winter schtick, with daytime temps creeping barely into the 50s, and that
sharpish wind slicing through several layers of clothing. So I am deeply
grateful for having functioning central heating in my house, with a thermostat,
which enables me to come in from that cold outside, to a blissfully warm inside,
no matter which room I walk into.
A
long time ago I realized what a difference having heat makes on one’s outlook.
We were moving from the house where I grew up to another one, which had been in
probate and therefore the gas wasn’t connected. I went over on a December
morning to wait for the PG&E guy, and in the hour or so it took, I felt
like the entire world blew rocks. We’re talking Los Angeles, but in the
foothills, so it was pretty chilly, and that house was…weighing heavy on my
soul.
But
within a few minutes after PG&E fired up the furnace and I felt the warm
air through the vents—my spirits started to lift, and all kinds of things
seemed possible. Nothing else had changed except the place wasn’t freezing.
So,
every time I walk through the front door now I’m reminded again what a blessing
this is, how fortunate I am to have shelter that offers this kind of comfort throughout this bleak season.
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