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Outlasting Winter: Counting Days Until the Light Returns

for the "Ritual of Winter" challenge

By Imola TóthPublished 27 days ago Updated 27 days ago 4 min read
Runner-Up in The Ritual of Winter Challenge
Outlasting Winter: Counting Days Until the Light Returns
Photo by Jessica Mangano on Unsplash

I told my partner I might have to give up on the challenge. I have no winter rituals, no cherished traditions. Winter, for me, is not a season I celebrate. It is a season I survive.

“I’m basically half plant, half marmot,” I said, disguising my disappointment as a joke.

He laughed. It's his way of agreeing.

But it was not, in truth, a joke.

"But your whole winter is one ritual." he added. And I had to admit, he was right.

I am built for sunlight, fresh air and being outdoors. When the last of the autumn foliage disappears, it takes my brightness with it, as a token of my love. The world is drained of color. The sky turns gray and lightless. My body responds as if something essential has been misplaced, and it simply doesn't want to move.

I hang fairy lights through the house—not for Christmas, but to trick my body into believing it's sunnier than it is. The cold nests into my bones with the intimacy of a resented family friend. The damp winters, brown and snowless, make everything worse. I long for the winters of my childhood, when the snow was almost as big as me. I was small then, but it rose nearly to my parents’ shins. Now I am grateful if I see five snowflakes in a year.

Is it even winter without snow?

I may also make things worse for myself by having too much free time. My work is in forestry, and here in the Grand Est region of France, winters can be piercingly cold.

When the temperature drops to minus eight Celsius degrees, my toes go numb beneath the layers of socks, aching as if they might fracture with the next step. Once, in desperation, I hid heating packs in my boots. It didn't work.

Because I work for myself, and because I'm careful with money throughout the year, I can afford not to work from mid-December through most of January. You cannot plant trees in frozen ground or when it snows. Brush cutting becomes difficult. Logging is possible, I am told, but I am afraid of chainsaws and have not yet tested that particular courage. And so I stay home.

As you can imagine, this leaves me with ample time and energy to suffer.

I do have a winter bucket list, written during optimistic summer months: try to ski, learn ice skating, wander Christmas markets with roasted chestnuts and mulled wine burning my hands, travel somewhere where winter still behaves properly—or somewhere people have never heard of snow.

I have never crossed a single item off. Don't ask me why, I could never answer.

Over thirty-four years, I have developed some sort of winter remedy, though. I call it medicine, though it does not cure anything. No matter how faithfully I administer it, February still arrives with heavy thoughts I would rather not name.

Still, the ritual persists. It has to.

My winter survival kit is ever growing. If you wondered what it contains, it's nothing special, really.

My prescription requests cosy knitwear, and pretty scarves— one for the body, the other for the soul. Heat must be taken in regularly: tea, coffee, hot chocolate, chai, horchata... Fruit in the mornings, for the vitamins. And gooey melted cheese, at all hours. It must have something to do with the casomorphins.

Books are essential. At least three genres within reach, to suit shifting moods and needs. The laptop remains open, waiting—for writing, if the muse is kind, or for distraction in the form of games, if she is not. Short days require a movie. One a day keeps the doctor away, or something like that. Series are reserved for bed, a ritual shared with my partner and one that transcends seasons.

And there's a battery inside me, you see. It has to be charged daily, like an old Nokia.

When there is no snow, charging must be done manually and requires discipline. There's a calendar to count the days spent indoors. A walk must be enforced when the number of those days exceeds two.

For daily consumption, the kit includes chocolate and chips, though some have been replaced with apples and peanut butter. A bag of mixed nuts is also permitted.

The yoga mat remains rolled out; it's easier to step on it if I can't avoid it. Don't expect anything vigorous, though. My body feels broken from the year's work.

Every once in a while some devil possesses me, making me feel restless. I've found that jumping around to an aerobic video helps to exorcise it. Usually. The effect may last for three or four days.

In case of snow a secondary plan comes to life.

This is the time of relief. The task of counting the days is dropped. The devil that drains my energy stays away as long as the battery is kept outdoors. (Perhaps he lacks appropriate winter clothing.)

There is an invisible energy source outside that automatically connects—likely through some Wi-Fi-like mechanism—and recharges the battery with bio-energy and bright mood. One charge can sustain me for weeks, but only until the snow begins to melt.

And this is how my winter becomes a single, extended ritual: of outlasting the season. I do not light candles to welcome winter or to count the days until Christmas. I light them to keep myself warm. I count the days until spring arrives and the first green buds appear. I watch the light return, minute by minute, keeping count until one morning I realize the days are finally longer again.

humanity

About the Creator

Imola Tóth

I write poetry and fiction on the edge of the map when I'm not working in the forest.

Medium | Instagram

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Comments (13)

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  • Angie the Archivist 📚🪶a day ago

    Congratulations!🥳 A lovely read & excellent take on the challenge. It’s Summer here in Oz… you might need to visit!🙃

  • Wooohooooo congratulations on your win! 🎉💖🎊🎉💖🎊

  • Harper Lewisa day ago

    Congratulations!💖

  • Paul Stewarta day ago

    Knew this would place lass! Well done my friend. Was happy to see you get another placement!

  • Dalma Ubitz14 days ago

    this felt like a diary entry of my own. fantastic work, as always, imola!

  • Aarsh Malik21 days ago

    Beautifully written and immersive. I could feel the chill and warmth you described, and it made the essay very engaging.

  • Sandor Szabo21 days ago

    "I've found that jumping around to an aerobic video helps to exorcise it." I love the pun, intentional or not. I have to confess that I needed to translate the centigrade temp to Fahrenheit and that I too share your fear of chainsaws though mine comes from firsthand experience with the mishandling. Stay warm and I hope the muse visits more often than not :)

  • Paul Stewart25 days ago

    I love this a lot and relate to it. You remind me do.much of Ruth with the feeling the cold and not handling the dull light. I like parts of winter as it's part of the cycle but gate when it's just too long. I am going to borrow some of your ideas and rituals and employ them this year. Well done on what will undoubtedly be another placement for you my friend. My son made horchata recently. Our youngest who is 18 and does cooking and catering at college. It was delicious and there's a song called horchata by vampire weekend that's awesome. Sorry I digress. I love your natural writing voice and could read a whole book in it. Anyway think I've said enough now. I hope the season is kind to you. Also as a man who is flawed I'd love to point out how your partner quietly sounds awesome in this piece because of how well he knows you and called it that you do have a ritual or else you wouldn't have written this. Ok also think it's cute and life affirming that you and he have that ritual that you share throughout the year. Well played lass well played.

  • Sandy Gillman25 days ago

    I can really relate to this! I hate winter and I didn't realise how much it was getting me down until the weather started warming up and my mood instantly improved!

  • Your toes go numb even under layers of socks? Gurl, I would just freeze to death, lol. I'm so grateful Malaysia doesn't have any seasons, but is hot the whole year. I can't even stand being in aircond that 26°C 😅😅

  • Sid Aaron Hirji26 days ago

    -8c is toast warm for us in winter. I too loathe winter even though it's roughly 6-8 months long. I try to keep busy during it

  • Mark Graham27 days ago

    I totally agree with you winter is not winter without snow. I was raised in Pennsylvania and now live in Louisiana. I went from snowy to rainy and warm and now in December I want cold or at least chilly not warm and humid. If I see a frosty morning I hurry to take a picture for that is as white as it is going to get. Good job.

  • Wow. I'm Singaporean, so heat here is a given...and we need kits to survive that! And I'd include the chocolate and chips in my heat kit too! And Imola - the descriptive language here is excellent. Well done.

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