Saturday, December 30, 2017

DECEMBER 29TH, 2017 - COLOR, EQUANIMITY, AND LIGHT ACCENTUATE THE BEAUTY OF WHITE

First glimpses of warm colors beautifying and accentuating white

I had thought, the second snowfall of the year would be it for a while; after all it was the real deal. Little did I know that the mother-nature had surprise for us all, up her sleeve… On the fifth day of Christmas that surprise is waiting for me on my porch. Two more inches of snow have puffed up my porch and more is falling, this time in fluffy big flakes. I wish I could drop everything and start strolling through the streets and visually and sensually devour this miracle. Alas, I have responsibilities I have to attend to until mid-afternoon today that I cannot postpone. 

Just before turning into Terry Trueblood Park

When I am done with my duties, I am delightedly surprised that not only the snow is still falling, but doing so with fierce force. One more time, all the gray and black mud and ice are being smoothed out; velvety soft becomes the name of the game again. A wild question rises in my mind: I wonder how the Terry Trueblood Park would look like under the white cover? As I approach my turn to the park, a snow truck moves faster and turns into the park ahead of me. I follow the truck and realize how very fortunate I am that the truck’s timing was perfect. 

The land, the lake, the sky are all but one

The tire tracks are the only sign that there is a road in the park. I follow the truck and find a safe spot, which I assume to be the parking lot from the stones potentially located on the sidewalk. This is the power of white: When it takes over the sky, the earth, the water, the boundaries disappear, everything becomes one. This is the first time, I am sensing this dissolution of boundaries including those between my “self” and the nature. I sense something close to “lack of self” that Buddhist scholars teach often, for the first time in my life.

Humble sentient beings against the white of the lake

There is some peace in this sense of my boundaries dissolving in those of the road, the parking lot, the lake, the shore across the lake, the park, the sky… Shades of gray all the way to black interrupt this dissolution here and there, in the form of naked trees, bushes, dried tall grass, lamp posts, walls of the park facilities… I can't help but appreciate the beauty of stark contrast of delicate, naked low-rising trees, freeze-scorched, petrified small bushes against white.

Gray white contrast

This park was man-made with a lake covering three quarters of the park by the company that quarried this land for many years. Certainly they were mandated to complete this task when they were ready to leave the quarry. In the last several years, the park has become a favorite for hikers, bikers, sailors, kayakers, canoers, or simply picnickers. In the summer, it has a variety of appearances, colored with blue and green in mid-day, yellow, orange, pink, and red at sunset and sunrise… I hadn’t seen it this white before:

Vanishing boundaries, revisited...

Had I not been to this park many many times before, it would have been very difficult to guess where the land ends and the lake starts. It still is almost impossible to identify the boundaries of the lake. Disappearance of sharp boundaries must be the reason why there is such peace, calm and serenity in the air… Then I see something, color: The glass fencing of the patio that belongs to a recreation facility in the park with its ice-blue color brings a surreal sense to this ambience. I spend several minutes there absorbing this cold but warm, artificial but so fitting, geometric, yet, very soft and artistic installation almost shimmering in the middle of this huge white expanse.

Lack of "self" may feel something like this..

My meditation now has become “color”. As I almost drink the vastness of the white, its density and intensity, its weight and lightness, I feel a childish joy when I catch the glimpse of color within its bosom here and there. A fire hydrant or a kid's fallen mitten with their red contrast against the snow is almost a rose shooting out of the earth. Traffic lights of red, yellow and green against the white sky are like specks of paint dashed onto the canvas of a painter. A not so natural looking small red-brown cabin nestled against the woods on the way back to town becomes a postcard-quality contrast against the white background.


A child was here, perhaps not today, and his/her mitten is awaiting a pick up..

The harsh temperature is tearing my eyes. I see a spherical icicle forming at the tip of my eye lashes on the left side. I watch it from 1 cm distance forming, growing bigger, and with its own weight rolling down my cheek onto my shawl to its demise with a smile. Then the wind blows a few strands of my wild hair in front of my right eye. The icicle on that side grows bigger, acquires a coma shape; it is trying to roll down as well. But the nest created by my eye lashes plus the strands of hair has embraced it so well, I can see from behind that although it is now turning into a question mark, it probably won't find its way to where its sister might have melted in my shawl. When I finally return to the parking lot, I see four Chinese college students. One of them, who will become one of my color objects chuckles with "You have iced up!". She takes a picture of my icicle hanging down my hair and eye lashes. A first in my life...

Icicle hanging down my eye lashes doesn't look as romantic as it seemed to me from behind

The four Chinese students are from the Theater Department of Cornell College in Mount Vernon. Although, not studying music, two of them know my good friend James Martin, who teaches at the Music Department, at Cornell. . She is wearing a long other two seem to move on, so I don't "interrogate" them about where they are form in China, what brought them here, why Cornell, etc... After all, we are here for the snow, the white, and I, now, a bit for color, too. And she has it, Sguyhu (hope the spelling is correct). She is wearing a bluish gray  long coat with a big hood. The hood has pink fur trimming! I ask her if I can take a picture of her as she is admiring the lake. She turns her face to the lake, poses for me with energy of youth and a dramatic embracing the earth pose, she is a theater major after all! I love it.

Pink against the white expanse

As I leave the park, I notice a small red cabin tucked into a wooded area, what a contrast with its environment all in shades of white, gray and black. Lanes on the road are just suggested by the tire traces. The cars emerge out of the thick layer of still-falling snow with their headlights that look like pupils of a cat with orange reflection of a flash... As I approach my neighborhood, I recognize the specks of unique colors of the homes in my neighborhood, thanks to the white contrast.

This is not the Alps, Iowa City...

A snow shovel against a garage door becomes the highlight of the façade of a house. Shutters and gutters with colors contrasting with the subdued colors of the windows and walls they are attached to, create such a beautiful contrast with the white around them. And then, doors, doors, doors… Many homes have such lovely doors with colors defining the front of the home they belong to. I want to take close-up pictures of these beautiful doors like my dear friend Noyan, who does exactly that in his urban photography journeys.  However, that is not American style, without having permission to do so, I don't feel comfortable doing it, except for one, which is the door of my dear friend Joan's house.

My friend Joan's front door: Her heart is a sanctuary to all sentient beings

Thus, comes the true reason why I call Iowa City “home” for the last 16 years. Many yards have added color to their lot with the signs they host: “Black lives matter”, “Whoever you are, wherever you come from, we are happy you are our neighbor”, “Sanctuary everywhere”, “Love trumps hate” among others. I am so happy and proud that these are my neighbors. These are the men and women, I will say “Happy new year” to throughout my hike in my neighborhood. They are all good, caring, loving, sensitive and sensible people. I have seen many of them in the protests that erupted after Trump's election as a result of fear-mongering and 2010 gerrymandering. They care about their children, their family, their neighbors, community, society and the globe with no discrimination.

As Rumi stated: "Come, whoever you are, wherever you come from; come." inviting people to his temple...

That is why I love living in this “Republic of Iowa City”, as it came to be known during Vietnam war; an oasis in the middle of nowhere, in the Midwest. You can easily bump into a doctoral student working on his thesis as a taxi driver, with whom you may have a very philosophical discussion on the way to the airport in this city! Half the population either goes to college, or teaches at the University, or is working for a master's or doctoral degree... Although my daughter misreads my passion for good education as elitism, I do not agree with her and will continue seeking people, with whom I can have deep intellectual conversations all my life...

Although snow is still falling, shoveling is under way along with supervising kids playing in the snow

I bump into families shoveling the snow with their kids. I play with the kids, chat with the adults, feeling safe, accepted, welcomed, and treated kindly. I hope they feel the same way, too. White is still falling, still accumulating, and puffing up the blanket it has been laying out for a week now. My coat, shawl, gloves are gradually turning into white. I feel the caressing coolness of each flake as they land on my face.

Light is adding a different dimension to white

The sensation comes and goes just like fleeting thoughts during my meditations. I see the white globules at the tip of my eye lashes. I wonder if there is any color about me since I am dressed all in gray and black. Volla, my shawl is blue, my favorite color! I am glad the Chinese students at the park took a picture of me admiring the lake, too, just like I did of the young artist with the pink hood...

My silhouette is still relatively sharply outlined, but in fact, my self is dissolved in the beauty around me

As the day gives in to an early settling evening, snow has slowed down. Neighbors are out and about with their shovels. Most of them are young people and have their kids around them. The kids are just playing with and in the snow, finding the fattest snow heaps and jumping into them as if to become one with the snow. Snow does that to anyone, who has preserved their core nature of having come from mother nature.

Light, color, and white, perfect combination!

The kids and their parents playfully going about their chores, the elderly, standing strong and doing their own shoveling, all bring a smile and loving kindness to my heart. They all add their own color to pure white. Then comes  the light!  Houses of the east side come to life in a different sense. Some with their Christmas lights, some with their living room windows, some with Holidays ornaments on their doors or windows…

Light in one of the unique homes of the east side

White is transformed, yet, once again. Shades are longer, pink or orange hue from windows is reflected on the trees, bushes, and the white. A chimney here and there is letting me know that there is a fireplace going on in some. There is life and warmth in these houses. What I see unfold before my eyes takes me back to my childhood. Having grown up in Izmir, where it snowed once throughout my childhood and a few "spoonful" of it at that! Craving for snow, I loved and collected winter postcards: The scenery in my neighborhood is transforming into my childhood postcards, is that the reason this little girl in my soul is blissfully joyful.

Back to my cul de sac, it is pretty much dark now

What bothers me just a bit is the knowledge that there are homeless people even in this peaceful city that cares about its people. I wonder if every one of them found their way to the shelter in town, if they have enough food, if there are resources to help them get out of being homeless. Then there are many more, who may have a roof over their heads, but are essentially homeless, jobless, some with fatherless kids... Some of whom I may end up seeing at the hospital... I know, if there is a next homestead for me, it will be somewhere with white and light, AND humane equanimity…  

Color, white, and endurance
Dancer within, dancers without

What is within, what is without?



 

 

 

Thursday, December 28, 2017

48 HOURS IN PAKISTAN 2017 - 3 - LAHORE SKIES AND ROADS AND BIKERS


As I go through the passport control, I can’t help but notice the variety of head coverings in both men and women… Women anywhere from traditional head scarf casually covering some of their hair to the loose shawl over the head like Benazir Bhutto’s, to burka style exposing the face, to burka style, exposing only the eyes on an on… The most interesting one is a woman with burka on. She has a transparent veil over her face that comes down to her lips. The part covering her lips is an opaque silver piece covering only her mouth on her face:

This was not exactly what I saw, but the function was similar, to cover the mouth...

Many men with a white fez on their heads, the extremely jittery man standing in front of me has a white muslin large shawl covering his head over his white fez: Is he just late for his connecting flight as is the case with so m any people at the airports, probably the cause of negative energy surrounding all of us.. He even attempts to go before a modern young woman and her son with a sneaky attitude. My heart rejoices when she very adamantly tells him to go back to his spot on the line! Let’s see how often this, woman power setting boundaries for unleashed testosterone in this patriarchal society will happen during my visit…

A group of Pakistanis at an airport from the internet

Going through customs is uneventful. As I get out through the baggage claim area, I am appalled with the number of people on both sides of the exit door: I know in eastern cultures there is no concept of personal space, but I have never seen this type of a crowd even in political demonstrations of hundreds of thousands of people that I had attended in my youth. There are two walls of human flesh with not even one inch in between bodies on both sides of an aisle the exiting travelers are forcing open to be able to proceed. Each wall of human bodies is at least 8-10 bodies wide, luckily a young man holding a sheet of paper with my name on it “Mr. Resmiye Oral” has found a spot for himself who knows how long ago in the very front.
My arrival scene was very similar to this with security and guns included

I smile at him, both of us are visibly relieved. He leaves his spot and we both start walking toward the exit I through the two walls of people and he behind them. Occasionally he raises his hand above the crowd to let me know he is still there!. We finally meet on the sidewalk past the exit doors. I am not sure if I should shake hands with him, neither is he. We just say hi and he takes off with my luggage, with his long strong legs. Although I am a fast walker, I sense, I use all my force to keep up with him, I will soon understand why he is rushing: The hotel van, “Oh he is the hotel shuttle driver, not somebody from a travel agency or conference organization”, is parked about ¼ of a mile away. More importantly, traffic is a killer in Lahore when the airport is 25 kms away from where the hotel is located.

Traffic in Lahore was no different than in Karachi

It becomes clear that Naseer doesn’t speak much English, leaving our conversation opportunity very limited. I learn from him that thank you in Urdu is “Shukriyah”, not shukran as in Arabic. Easy to memorize since Shukriyah is very similar to a Turkish female name shukriyeh! As I have gotten into the habit of paying thanks to all the good in my life every night it is no surprise that the two first words in Urdu I learn and keep using are Shukriyah and Gee for yes. Yes to life, yes to openness, yes to embracing all that comes with my journeys to places as well as my journey through life.

Air pollution is a second major challenge in Lahore

As Naseer inches the van through the turtle-pace traffic, I have the opportunity to observe my surroundings, be it in the dark. We pass through a divided road lined up with a variety of stores, some very fancy inside, some not so much; anything from butcheries to vegetable stores, to shoe-stores, to women’s apparel, to pharmacies among others… He tells me that this is a very famous shopping place although the ambience looks very run down to me. This will continue hitting me over and over again in my 48 hours in Pakistan: In the west, the care to the environment in which stores, offices and residences are built starts with the onset of the construction of such places. Only in ghettos, one would see a run down environment.

This view I thought belonged to a poor neighborhood, turns out it is a middle class residential area

In Pakistan, I will see again and again, inner spaces that are impeccable are in neighborhoods that reflect very little of what is inside. I wonder if this is residual from the colonial times when British most likely were sealing themselves off from the rest of the society in their cocoons… We pass through many neighborhoods, highways, and finally make left to a two way street. I have been gasping on the divided ways with crazy motorcyclists dancing in between cars and buses with a couple of inches of margin.

One of my Turkish friends had said: "Americans die by accident, we live  by accident": - Applies to Pakistani kids, as well.

I can’t help covering my face with my desperate hands when a biker passes us with a woman behind a man sitting sideways and… with an infant in between two bodies! The woman is holding the baby with one hand and holding onto the man’s body with the other. Not aware at this point that worse is yet to come: On the way to the university the next day I will see a bike with three adults on it and a baby between the man in the front and the woman in the middle. The two men’s bodies keep the woman in place since she is holding the baby with both hands! I start counting the number of people on each motor bike. The highest number I see is five adults on one bike, the last one kind of hanging down the back of the bike! My driver Mutasir tells me that motorbikes are a convenience in Pakistan since they can sneak through cars, (and, boy is that true!) and get to locations much faster than cars…

Four adults on one motorcycle!

Eventually, we come to a place where this Emporium Mall stands in conjunction with the Nashit Hotel that some of my fellow conference attendees have commented as being “amazing, absolutely stunning”. We have to take the elevator to the 4th floor to get to the lobby. Huge open space both vertically and horizontally with minimal furniture, lots of light, feels like a space ship with a huge carbon footprint to me rather than “amazing and stunning”. When I get to my room, I am flabbergasted with the space. It is probably a 1000 square feet suit, everything digitized, you can’t turn on one light only, any option turns on at least 5-6 lights at the same time.

Our rooms the conference organizers assigned to us are like dancing halls!

It is clear that Pakistanis believe, extravagance is necessary to please westerners, or is it themselves? Or is it residual from colonial times when the colonizers had established standards way way above what was the norm for the natives? I won’t be able to find the answer to this question without risking being rude… I just feel good when I hear that my dear friend Figen is also stunned with the unnecessary extravagance. We discuss how the vicinity of the hotel is in unimaginable contrast with its surroundings. I will wake up in the morning to see that on one side of my corner suite across the street is a shanty town of some 50 shacks and tents. There are kids running around in between tents that tells me that families live in this community.

Our "must-be-seven-star" hotel  and the  luxury shopping mall adjacent to it are neighbors to this shanty-town, where people live in tents and tin shacks with their kids

Around the corner on the other hand is almost dry desert land extending toward the horizon with one to three story buildings. It is difficult to say whether this is a residential neighborhood or business section of town. In just a few blocks the buildings disappear under thickening smog anyway. This will explain the bizarre burning coal smell that I sense in the van from the airport to the hotel. In the days I spend in Lahore colleagues will tell me how this is nothing, and before the rains started, how difficult it was to breathe the air in town.

Thick fog of air pollution burns the throat at every hour of the day

The explanation is the tradition in India adjacent to Pakistani border, which is only 20 kilometers to the east of Lahore. Apparently, once harvest is done in the fall, villagers in that region burn up all that remains on the fields, which lead to this seasonal severe atmospheric pollution.  Black carbon that my friend Greg works on, testament to the fact that borders mean little in this day and age… Despite all, I will discover in my 48 hours that, Pakistani people are so pleasant, so friendly, and hospitable, they will grow on me. The "air" is totally different than it was in Oman. Even their traditional religious conservatism is so much more relaxed than what I observed in Oman. I think, I can come back to this land, I will come back to help them build child protection response systems... If this is all I can give to this sweet people and their children, I will do that delightedly...
The air pollution may veil even the sun in the middle of the day at times creating this surreal frame

 

DECEMBER 28THE 2017: SECOND FALL - THE REAL DEAL

Takes only a day or two at most
White velvet to be stained
Turn gray, patchy black.
Soft to harsh
Smooth to rough

Scrape its bosom:
White bleeds black
Black streaks on her face
Smears from her tears?
Aging of fallen snow
And our winding path
Through life…
What happens
To our hearts in
40
50
60 years…
Then, when and if comes
The second snow
The real deal
Mature, soft, robust flakes
Pure, light, innocent

Dancing in the air
Elegantly
Confidently
Patiently
Lovingly…
In an hour or two at most
All streaks, scrapes and black
Embroidered back into
Soft, smooth, velvet
Pure, light, innocent
The real deal
Can happen to
Our souls, no?
Can heal all
Wounds and scrapes…
I should share this with my patients.
 
 

Wednesday, December 27, 2017

DECEMBER 24th 2017, 6 AM - WHEN THE WORLD SUBMITS TO WHITE


Ready to face the falling snow...
 
I have come to like the Christmas week in a year or two after my arrival in Iowa City, a university town in the Midwest of the USA. The weekend before Christmas, almost half the population leaves town, I discovered. All the college students, most of faculty and campus staff, and some of town’s natives, I think it adds up… The town, the hospital, where I work, wherever you go in the city feels almost deserted except for the shopping malls, where I rarely go during the shopping frenzy... In this “desertion”, I find peace and calm. In fact, the nest word that would describe what I truly find in the air during this week is “huzur”, a Turkish word that embraces peace, calm, subtle joy, and serenity. This “huzur”, the reduced population, traffic, noise, and hustle bustle bring to the city; I have come to enjoy immensely.

 
First snow of the year in Iowa City
 
Huzur” has started settling in since December 20th, right after the schools closed. On Christmas eve's day, I wake up at 6 am with an unusual light in my bedroom. A childish hope trying to surface in my heart whispers "Could it be snow?". I jump out of my bed, not quite mindfully, I have to confess, to find the nearest window. My heart leaps with joy! My kitchen window reveals a world out there, pure white.  

All white but the grass...
 
I go to my front-door with delight, crisp but soft chill of a white dawn fills my vestibule. It might have snowed lightly, since the grass is still absorbing the snow resisting to losing its pale green color. …Yet. Without even taking off my pajamas, I don myself with a second layer, a sweater that my  mother had knitted for me and fleece pants, perfect for this weather. Hiking socks, snow boots, a heavy shawl and barrette, and my winter gloves; my width is twice what it really is, but I am cozy and warm, ready to face the nature at this wee hour of the day, Christmas eve’s day, at that.

I love the first snow of the year, never miss the opportunity to walk in the snow when the nature’s white cloak is smooth, pure, untouched. What I like better than walking after the first snow is walking in it, as it is falling, as it is almost knitting its wrapping of purity. When I step down my porch, to my delight, I discover that the snow is, in fact, continuing to fall. Although, I have very little skin exposed with all my layers, the fine powdery cold globules landing around my eyes is evidence enough that snow and I will have fun this morning under Iowa skies full of “huzur”, pouring “huzur” over us sentient beings. The road, the sidewalks and part of the rooftops are covered with snow, but the grass, not yet. I almost feel guilty to step on the snow, it is so velvety-smooth, stretching before my eyes. The black squirrel of my neighborhood does it for as it rushes across the sidewalk and disappears up the huge oak tree in my next-door neighbor's yard. There… His adorable little light footprints planted his signature on the snow, with his unique design. There is no reason for me not to follow my friend's footsteps! Thank you brother squirrel, I can now move on without feeling guilty...

This squirrel and I played hide and seek for some five minutes...
 
There is nobody out, yet, I could believe I am in the wilderness, had it not been for the humble homes of my middle-middle class neighborhood. Squirrels are running from tree to tree and Canadian geese occasionally glide elegantly above the trees, no other moving creature in sight, yet. The snow must be falling hard, I can tell with not only the white streaks that start accumulating within the creases of my coat, but also with the snow cover on stones, rooftops, and stoops getting more well-defined every few blocks as I walk. The contours of trees and tree branches sharpen gradually, my most favorite of all nature’s artistic endeavors.

Naked trees against gray sky is almost surreal...
 
I love this subtle color contrast-building when it snows. The sky is gray, the trees, buildings, rocks, roads all have different shades, but all in the light gray to black range. White, then becomes the defining color in this backdrop. As I turn east on the biking trail that I use often in the summer, I am now walking along a small creek. It's been very cold lately in Iowa City, I am not surprised that the creek is frozen. However, there are circles of water scattered here and there in the ice as if the river is piercing through the thin ice. A bunch of rocks line up a section of the creek, they are aligned in such a way as if a retention wall has eroded toward the creek. The snow has defined each rock beautifully; their angles in proportion to one another, the exact size of the top of each one of them, all the cracks and crevices on their surfaces and the irregular gaps between adjacent rocks. It is an exquisite scene.
 
An old retention wall kneeling toward the creek on my trail

As I leave the main street behind, I come across a bunch of Canadian geese crowning one of the trees in the park with their morning cacophony. As I stop and focus only on this chorus, though, that cacophony transforms into a musical. I think of Robert Wright, the author of “Why Buddhism is true” writing about how pain can be transformed into non-pain. Deep listening and deep “looking into” are the tools to transform our perceptions, some of which may not be accurate after all!
 
Snow accumulating fast every couple of blocks
 
An hour into my walk, neighborhood early-risers have also started finding their way to the trail, some with their dogs, some just walking and enjoying the first snow, some running. Everybody is under layers of clothing, hard to tell who is what. I know nobody could tell whether I am a woman or a man, neither can I... We still exchange "good morning, merry Christmas, same to you..."s with a light heart. I can sense the joy in the air.
 

One of my companions on the trail with her dog
 
People are good and kind in essence, wherever we go. I have seen this year after year, all over the world during my travels. It is true, here, too, although most of the world perceives America as an evil land and Americans as evil people, justly so to a certain extent because of all the hurt American governments have imposed upon world’s peoples. But this land also has its working people, some of which has fallen into lumpen proletariat, its middle class, its intellectuals, its progressives; just like any country on earth…
 
A mom and her kids playing in the snow in their own ways
 
I come across a mother and her three children, shoveling. I am now in a lower middle class neighborhood. The three kids are busy making a snow man with what their mother shovels off the sidewalk. What a sweet picture. I chat them up, they are eager to talk, they clearly feel safe, is it because "Mama is right here" or do I look like a safe person to them?

Sun finally rising slowly but surely
 
We exchange "merry Christmas" wishes and I move on as I smile at my memory from childhood. Having grown up in Izmir, Turkey, a city on the Aegean coast, where it rarely snowed, we craved for snow. Perhaps that is the reason, why, until adolescence, I collected postcards on which homes, villages were depicted covered with a foot of snow against the backdrop of mountains and forests. There would be smoking chimneys, evidence for a warm, happy home.
 
This vintage French postcard would be one I would frame on my wall in my childhood
 
When I was 5-6 years old, it “snowed” in Izmir! That’s what I thought then. Now I know that it just sprinkled a few shovels of powdery snow against the corners of walls. What a delight it was scraping a few spoonful of snow off the sidewalk… What a disappointment it was to see it all melt in our hands when we tried to pack the snow in our hands. My parents had laughed at us quite a bit, very lovingly, I could tell…

One of the oak trees standing strong
 
On my way back home, the trees, naked of all their leaves, reaching out to the sky with their arms and branches are spectacularly beautiful with what snow has done to them. I love the trees in my neighborhood. Midwest is famous for its tornadoes, wind storms, rainstorms and these trees stand up to all that torture. Even if they lose a branch or two here and there, they heal their wounds and continue standing strong in their reach to the sky. As Thich Nhat Hanh, an engaged Buddhist scholar and monk would say, when storms hit, they return to their roots to find the strength to deal with what turmoil hits their top branches. I am attracted to this virtue in human beings as well. As one of my best friends from Turkey would say “the strongest person is not one who hasn’t gone through difficulties, but that who has come out of them intact and more mature.”

Sun's playfulness on the snow and my footsteps crossing the yard of City High School
 
By the time, I arrive at the entrance of my cul de sac, I see that my outgoing footsteps are still the only sign of life left on the snow in my neighborhood. Snow has covered the lighter footprints of my black squirrel. When I get to my porch, I turn around and look at the world one more time. The grass has submitted to the snow, donned with a white blanket, who knows when we will see it again. The entire cul de sac is pure white, so becoming to the nature. To me, white in nature is purity, cleanliness, light, shimmer, expansiveness, peace, and “huzur”. That is what I feel right now, peace, calm, joy, and serenity, in short “huzur”.

My footsteps and my fellow sentient beings' creating our collective design on the snow
 
Snow is still falling. I close my eyes to just sense the small ice particles landing on my skin. When I open my eyes, I see my neighbor's oak tree rising to the sky with all its branches. Its white contoured arms against the gray sky are testimony how strong, although, solitary it is. I salute the dear oak tree with silent humility, then I notice the tiny white dots at the tip of, perhaps each one of my eye lashes. I… must have also submitted to White.  

The sun is almost up, snow has taken over not only my but also the lawns, lights will soon fade away as I thaw my hands and feet in the warmth of my house.