Halcyon Days of Winter

Twinkling lights
Warm glows
Fireside hot cocoa
Listen to the radio
Hold your breath waiting to hear
The DJ say
No school today

Lie on the snow blanket and get hypnotized
By flurries dancing before your eyes
Be an angel before you rise
Then make your snowballs to surprise
Your friends as they pass by

Hide out in your igloo
Or hit the slopes with your inner tube
Snow drifts
Ski lifts
Snowboarders showing off cool tricks

Off to the lake
To fish or skate
Lick an icicle to rehydrate
Join in the broomball game
Play til the Wolf Moon begins to wane

Snow plows cleared the way
Back to school, but that’s okay
Because here comes Valentine’s Day
Shoebox mailbox
For cards and sweets
Shy smiles and blushing cheeks

Look outside! Can I believe my eyes?
Swirling flakes, grey skies
Arctic blast, get home fast
What’s the forecast?
School tomorrow? Place your bets
Old Man Winter’s not done yet

To Scare or Not to Scare…

Why do we try to scare each other and ourselves? As FDR said, “The only thing we have to fear is…fear itself.” So why try to create more fear and chance traumatizing ourselves?

When I was young, my friends and I used to play Ghosts in the Graveyard. It was played at night, in the dark, out in the yard. One player would hide, while the rest of us creeped around the yard looking for that player. Once the person hiding was found, they would chase after all of us as we ran back to the safety of home base. This game was thrilling in the sense that it was fun, but scary as hell! I didn’t like to be the one to hide, because then I’d just be sitting in the dark listening to all of the sounds that go bump in the night. “What was that?” I’d wonder, as my imagination spiraled. Was that a person? An animal? Just the wind in the leaves? Big foot??

At slumber parties there were always the late night rituals of telling ghost stories and playing games like Bloody Mary and Light as a Feather, Stiff as a Board. Some friends even pulled out the Ouija Board. We would conjure up these sensations of spirits, and not necessarily friendly ones, like Casper. There was always one girl who ended up crying, who I was grateful for, because that signaled the end of freaking each other out.

I never understood the desire to watch horror movies. My sister and her friend would watch all the Freddy and Jason movies, but I steered clear. I had to draw the line somewhere. Vision can be a curse; things seen can’t be unseen.

Halloween is what you make it, I suppose. I was always in it for the candy, and my costumes were more Wonder Woman and less Wicked Witch. But even though I was out for the treats, I was taking my chances with the tricks. It’s the not knowing that creeps me out the most. What’s around that corner? What’s making that noise? Who’s really behind that mask?

As spooked as I got, I still participated, and I’m trying to understand why. Adults threatened us with the Boogeyman if we weren’t acting right, but it’s not like they encouraged us to scare the shit out of each other. We did that all on our own volition! Maybe it’s all about self-defense and we were just gearing up to be able to conquer our inevitable fears. Maybe we did it to remind ourselves that we really were safe, and that what we conjured up in our imaginations was just that: imaginary. And maybe we practiced being brave for those times in life when we would face the real scary stuff…like hormones.

Spontaneous Fun

I had a dream the other night. I was in an airport and I was hanging out with Mario Lopez. He was his current age, but it was also before he became famous, because dreams are contradictory like that. We were having a conversation about what we want in life. His was to be an actor. I told him that if that was what made him happy, then he should stick with it. I think he took my message to heart. Then he asked me, “What brings you joy?” My answer was very clear as I replied, “Spontaneous Fun.” Then I realized I’d lost my phone somewhere in the airport and it was time to board my flight. My time with Mario was cut short.

I woke up thinking, “Maybe I should have had a deeper answer?” But why? Do I feel guilty for wanting fun to be a priority in my life? Should I have a more serious goal? Mario just wanted to know what brings me joy, right? And what is joy? Joy is the happiest version of happy. The biggest smile. The loudest laugh. Side stitches and weak knees. Joy is love because nothing else matters in the moment.

And so why does fun bring joy? Correction, why does spontaneous fun bring joy? I guess my life has become so planned, so routine, that fun has to be worked into the schedule. Is planned fun less joyful than spontaneous fun? My friends and I plan several gatherings throughout the year, and we have fun (maybe too much fun?), but it’s still a lot of work to get to the point of fun. So maybe that’s the key, I want more fun that requires no work, no asking the neighbor to watch the dogs, no asking my parents to watch my daughter, no packing, no saving, no lists.

When I was little, fun was never planned. Friends would show up at my door, and vice versa, and out we’d run to do whatever we felt like doing; bike ride, swim in the pond, a game of HORSE in the driveway, kickball in the field, walk to the town square for a sweet treat. Spontaneous fun seems to require a sense of freedom. Are adults less free to have fun?

Such conundrums I’m left with: I need to work for free time so that I can plan some spontaneity; I need to say No more often so that I can say Yes more often; I need to be irresponsible in order to have more guilt-free fun. Everyone has their own idea of fun. Mine involves four A’s: action, adventure, amusement, and an awakening of the senses. Now how can I create more spontaneous fun? Mario, help me name my adventure!