Did I Do Alright?
The bluff was awash in foliage for dreamers—the reds, golds and mottled yellows greeting me with great fanfare each morning when I raised up in bed and looked out onto the craggy bluff trailing off into sky. The earliest autumn leaves littered the ground like dulling confetti while summer seemed to try to hang on with a sprinkling of warm days. She was steadily losing ground to the rousing parade of hues celebrating the change of seasons. Intermittent huffs of winter had us shivering as squirrels fed on fallen acorns that would hit the deck with a thwack, bounce several times and roll to a stop in a crevice in the buckling wood slats the weather so cruelly brutalized in the exposed environment.
When there was moisture in the air, morning meant fog's dull mask would overtake us and the waterfall would rage when rain had been present, hissing as it spilled itself over the indention in the bluff that allowed it an outlet to the rocks below. I couldn't see it when the fog moved in but its smattering filled the house. It sang me to sleep at night and I often set the alarm so I could awaken before the sun rose in order to watch the sky change. The lights of the city seemed frenetic in the cold air as daylight took over—vibrating intensely as if they were attempting to ward off the passing of their torches by amping up their energy. There was, of course, no way to compete with the sun's eminence and I thought about how so much of life was like that—a lesson in futility.
The silhouettes of the mountains ringing Chattanooga's verdant valley seemed to meander when seen from an equal height, their profiles rugged as they rose against the soft orange that went white as morning launched herself with abandon. The trees beyond the windows looked as if they'd been stamped there—so dark against the coming day they were like a serigraph embedded in a lively watercolor. There was one bright star glimmering like a beauty mark just before the night lost its grasp on the firmament. The "changing of the glowing guard" made me question whether light in life was similar to the "light" of knowledge. Neither was consistent as it meandered through its conduits, and I felt there was a similarity to avenues of thought and paths of light, though I couldn't yet explain how. I was merely left with the question, "How far do we have to travel to grow into consciousness and is there any way to predict where the road leads?"
I was scribbling about this as we drove to Davenport Gap to scout Jim's next hike on the Appalachian Trail. We faced some wild weather as moments of intensive sunlight were followed by obliterating clouds that seemed to devour the car, spitting sleet and snow before they swirled away to reveal another spell of glaring light. The sunset was blood-orange as it bathed the hills and trees in tones that made them seem as if they were born of fire. Everything was tinted in warmth, which was such a paradox given that it was brutally cold beyond the windshield.
We stopped at a restaurant nestled into the front rooms of a log cabin where there was a glorious fire in the fireplace. The ladder-back chairs were hard and knobby but the flames bathed the room in welcoming heat. One woman tended the restaurant—waiting and bussing tables, and keeping the fire ablaze. We were the only customers and after she read us the specials, she removed the large screen covering the yawning opening of the stone fireplace, then teased us about not bringing in any wood—a comment that had Jim sliding back his chair in order to grab some logs from the porch. She put her hand on his shoulder as she passed, telling him that she was teasing. When she reentered—followed by a blast of frigid air as the screened door slapped closed behind her—she had an armful of small logs that she tossed onto the back of the fire. The blaze caught but the flames were still a bit softer than they had been when we'd first arrived.
"Now come the big ones!" she announced as she disappeared through the door again. Jim couldn't let her carry them by herself so he went to help her, following her back inside and standing like a good Boy Scout as she picked the pieces of wood from his grasp, placing them in a careful pattern atop the flames. "I'll scotch it now!" she announced as she placed one in the back. "Did I do alright?" she asked as she returned the screen. Jim told her she'd built the best fire he'd ever seen and I could tell he meant it. When she came to take our order, I noticed she wore no makeup and I wondered if every facet of her life was so free of pretense. I thought about her as we drove home in the dark: there was something about this woman that was so genuine it deserved attention. It didn't matter that her clothes were rumpled and her hair was disheveled. In fact, it could have been these very details that made her so interesting to me because they were the ones I couldn't shake. These bare facts made her seem more real than anyone I'd ever met, especially the women in my life who were dressed to the nines and wore slathers of makeup beneath their perfectly coiffed hair.
We were going through one of those periods of being deluged with parties, which meant we were spending far too much time with the "perfectly put-together." I was hanging on for dear life yet again, and I wrote my notebook, "This writer feels empty: no words flow willingly from her pen." The only thing that soothed me was nature and her inexplicable moods. She brought me a sparkling gift when she left a blanket of snow on the bluff—so softly and gently it fell, muting the world and making me feel like a child tucked into a nursery wearing my footie pajamas. I was noiselessly padding my way through my cloistered world when the sun came up, the woods glistening and the trees turning to pristine lace. Spaced down the bluff as they were, the frosty progression of limbs joined with the liquid that had frozen as it cascaded over the mountain's edge to create the illusion that a beautiful bridal veil had been unfurled. This was Bridal Veil Falls, as it had been named decades before on just such a day no doubt. The house was so blissfully quiet in the snow-pack that I could hear the steady rhythm of my shallow breathing. What a miracle for a winter morning!
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