Toward Solstice: Ten Unexpected
Sources of Light (An Instagram Essay)
We are pretty good at recognizing sources of light. There
are candles and stars and light bulbs. There’s the switch on our phones to make
them into flashlights, and the moon hanging like a lantern overhead. But this
year is darker than most, so we must be vigorous in our search for light. What
follows are ten images taken over the past two weeks. Some are sweet or
hopeful, while others are unusual—even strange and hard to account for—but which,
nonetheless, struck me as sources of light.
To the right side of my car, motion. In the stream below the
highway, two deer slip through the water and into the woods. I’m driving
through the part of New York that’s so far south it’s practically Pennsylvania.
The sun is just starting to rise and hasn’t yet burned the fog from the fields.
The deer are quick as silver, and the stream too, is silver. The trees and
grasses are white with new winter. I think: This is what breath looks like.
I take the fossils into my hands some days. Not because they’re
shells and conjure images of the beach, though it’s not bad to warm yourself
with memory. But I am thinking of another sort of memory, of the earth, the soil,
and what persists. Though it is inland, the bluffs along the York River are
studded with shark teeth and scallops and coral. I went there this spring and
found the Chesapecten jeffersonius
and spiral Turritellas in the sand. Millions
of years have passed since the whale heaved her blue hulk over the ancient sea
that is now Virginia, but her fossilized bone is still there. It astounds me,
this fact. That I can reach out and touch the delicate cream-colored spiral and
know time.
#3 Morning Sky,
390 South
Line of traffic, line of pines, and the sun bigger than all
of us.
#4 10,000 Maniacs
They sounded so preachy in the late 1980s, which was hard to
take. Sound was the main thing then, the flight of guitar strings, the voice’s
ability to make beauty, to soar above mismatched living room furniture and
chemistry exams and grungy church basements. How time changes things. I’ve been
playing Blind Man’s Zoo on repeat in
my car and can’t get enough of young Natalie singing her heart out over poverty,
pollution, and war. I’ve grown nostalgic for voices that tell the truth, I
suppose, find myself buoyed by someone singing straight out about how off
course we’ve flown.
#5 Ginkgo
leaves
On the ground in
Richmond. The leaves fell on the same weekend the decorations came out and put the
artificial strings of light to shame.
#6 Poor Box,
Albion
The poor box in a place where I was
once poor, a town not very far from where the 10,000 Maniacs
first recorded.
What? You think. This is not a source of light. But look closely. See the way
the brass has worn? Notice the slot that’s been pried with a tool and torn into
as someone tried to twist their way inside. Perhaps this is sad to you, this
attempted theft of goodwill. Maybe it seems desperate and a symbol of all
that’s wrong with the world. But I see something else in the battered poor box.
Perhaps it’s because I was the overly polite and patient variety of poor that I
find it heartening that the poor are not always content to wait.
#7 Mandarins
I mean the fancy
variety, with the leaves on. The sort you’d need to break into a poor box for.
But the splurge is worth it. Because of the perfect taste and smell of the
peel, yes. But also because the leaves get you that much closer to the tree.
#8 Turkey-Day
It’s not that the young woman in my class with the voice
like soft cloth slaughtered the turkeys, it’s that she did not flinch at the
sight of red flesh hanging garish from their beaks or the spread of their feathers
or the up-close spill of blood. More than that, it’s the way that when another
student invited others over for Thanksgiving (If you need somewhere to go…), the gentle soul who’d shocked us by
killing the birds said: I have two
turkeys in the back of my car, let me give you one. For a reason I can’t
quite name but suspect has to do with honesty, the young woman—who’d faced a
thing we had not, who had been violent and was suddenly rendered badass—stood
before us, somehow, impossibly, even more tender than before.
#9 Love Songs
Is the young man strumming his guitar near the English
building looking for attention? Is he a tad too earnest as he looks to the sky
and croons? Perhaps. But he stands there, singing Stay, as the rest of us shuffle by, on our way to and from our
final classes, to and from our cars, to and from our offices and grocery stores
and the next place we’ve told ourselves we need to be.
#10 Snow,
Lamppost
Just a few inches, but they came out of
nowhere, and this is Virginia, so people are scrambling for milk and bread
inside the store. And because this is a fine store in a fine neighborhood,
there will be goat cheese in their carts. There will be pancetta and extra
bottles of wine. And because this is the South, no one will cut another person
off as they reach for the last jar of tapenade. No one will say anything but, Drive safe now. But no matter the
imported Swedish cookies, newly ground coffee, and last loaves of freshly baked
bread, all the light we could ever need is swirling around outside.
*
Sonja Livingston's most recent book, Ladies Night at the Dreamland, combines history and imagination to illuminate the lives of women from America’s recent and distant past. She’s the author of the recent essay collection, Queen of the Fall, and the memoir, Ghostbread, which won an AWP Award in Nonfiction. Her writing has been honored with a New York Arts Fellowship, an Iowa Review Award, and Arts & Letters Essay Prize, and grants from Vermont Studio Center and The Deming Fund for Women. Sonja teaches in the Creative Writing Program at Virginia Commonwealth University.
Lovely moments
ReplyDeleteThis is a beautiful piece. Xo
ReplyDeleteI love everything about this.
ReplyDeletethank you!
ReplyDeleteSonja- nothing to change! Brought back memories of living in Richmond 34 years ago...
ReplyDeletethank you! p.s. I love that your user name is BillWanda.
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