Don't you just love it when you walk into the street in the morning, the air is crispy and the sky is blue? You can smell that autumn has come.
Some ten or even twenty years ago, that autumny breeze used to arrive in around September - when a new term just began, and the delightful weather seemed to give the new academic year a promising start. These days, thanks to global warming, autumn may not befall until November if there is any autumn at all.
It is amazing how weather affects the mood of a city. In summer, when it feels like a steaming kitchen outside but a freezing icebox indoors, our tempers are probably as fluctuating as the varying temperatures - it is easy to hover between the extremes of summer craziness and laziness. Once autumn is here, the mood changes - the city calms down and quietens; the city-dwellers' impatience disappears with the heat, and fine apparels replace loud summery attire.
I can still remember that autumn in Hokkaido, as I walked down the street, my senses fully absorbing the beautiful blue sky, the sweet crispy air and the autumn leaves - my heart was filled with both content and a wisp of inexplicable sadness that is generally associated with the season and, for a moment, I thought that life never felt so concrete before.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
i also think that noise level wanes with the drop in temperature. don't you get the feeling that every action seems to be muted when it is snowing?
perhaps i was expecting the falling of snowflakes to make some sort of sound when they reach the ground ...?
Oh it's true that it's quieter when there's snow on the ground, probably some physics effect, something about the snow absorbing noise.
I totally agree with how you feel about autumn, I even think the feelings are enhanced in more outdoor-ish places like Europe and North America, the blue skies are so intense and the deciduous trees are a feast for the eyes. Trinity backs and St John's playing fields, for example, it was freezing back then, but they were some of my favorite places in autumn.
Bring on winter! Canadian winters are without rivals..!
Post a Comment