The wintertime
is coming, the windows are filled with frost…Bob Dylan
Batten
the hatches, citybillies, and hunker down.
It’s time for winter and, here in winter, it’s all about conserving
energy and staying alive. The Wheel has
spoken and now the Wheel is silent. Set
in motion with the spring flowers, the Wheel is slowing to a crawl.
And
that’s all right.
It’s
the season of dormancy, the season of hibernation.
The
Earth Renewal Moon, then the Rest and Cleansing Moon, followed by the Big Winds
Moon…it’s the season of Waboose the White Buffalo, the Spirit Keeper of the
dark, the guardian of the freeze, the defender of the thaw.
His
position on the Medicine Wheel? If it
was a clock of standardized time, then he would take his throne at true
north…the midnight.
And
his native habitat? The open field, the long
prairie, the great plains…where you measure distance in days, not miles. Children born under this moon are patient and
prudent, slaves to their seasonal totems.
Like
the birch…the tree whose roots are used to make drinks, whose sap is used to
make medicine, whose bark is used to make paper…the children of Waboose are
giving, productive and imaginative. Like
the quartz, they have an inner clock.
Like the snow goose, they are a bit of a nitpicker.
And
this is their season and this is their place.
Season of the home, season of the hearth.
It’s
also the season of the flu and, so far, it’s a doozy.
Currently,
a certain strain of flu is taking on fierce and aggressive characteristics. This happens, sometimes, with living things.
Health
officials have identified this species of influenza as the H3N2 strain, the
very same strain that devastated the world over 40 years ago, when it was known
as the Hong Kong Flu.
And
it’s back in full force now. The H3N2
flu is currently sweeping across Turtle Island.
As of this writing, this species of flu has spread to 80% of the
country. Over 2,000 people have been
hospitalized. Twenty confirmed deaths.
Time
to stay away from people. Time for
selective society. Time to nest.
Time
to enjoy the comforts of home. Time to
catch the colors and fruits of the interior world, my own urban igloo.
One
minor problem.
During
the busy tree-hunting season, well, I’ve kind of let the cabin go to seed.
