It is Friday morning.
I am listening to the rain fall.
There is birdsong accompanying it.
It is one of the nicest sounds I know.
A curious phenomena (der der der-der-der) occurred this
week. The sun shone and the temperature
rose and steadily stayed at T-shirt weather warm. The wind hushed itself to the waftiest of
breezes and the clouds fluffed themselves up nice and proper, and sat just so
in the blue, blue sky. I sat out and
worked in the afternoon; a few days of being able to sit in the sunshine for a
couple of hours of day and read and write and work. One day I could see clear across to Wales and
the homeland sung choirs and Sirened me but I wouldn’t budge. The next day a beautiful haze hung over the
valley and a smudged green blue grey looked back at me. My arms went brown.
Being able to type “my arms went brown” is not something I
would have been able to type over the past decade. Down in New Zealand the sun wouldn’t brown my
arms: it would red my arms. My delicate
Northern Hemisphere skin simply never came to terms with the ozoneless (is that
a myth) barrage of rays that constituted weather down there. The pity of it was that the sun didn’t
actually have to be visible for me to suffer.
The last act of my dying teaching days in Otago was that of
umpire for a school cricket match in Dunedin.
The first time I had experienced Dunedin weather came after I got on a
bus in Oamaru in shorts and t-shirt, bathed in glorious, and then got off the
bus at the train station in Dunners bathed in horizontal, cold rain and a
howling wind. Anyway, this time, fully
prepared after ten years of horrible misjudgement of weather conditions, I
donned my coat and hat and walked out onto the field of play ceilinged by a
grey, overcast, relentlessly grey sky.
Muggy, sure, but grey; a Thomascene grey bobbing in the sky. And I got burnt redder than a red thing that
was embarrassed. That was the practice
in New Zealand for me. I would put on
sunscreen, I would wear a hat, I would put on after-sun. I would go red.
The rain is still falling.
The birdsong is still accompanying it.
It is still the nicest sound.
I’d forgotten what it was to get a sun-tan. I’d forgotten the Orwellian task of
considering yourself a healthy looker as you corroded your covering. The contradiction of the act hasn’t stopped
me from getting out on to the bench in the gardens, here, and sitting and
reading and writing and working. The
fringe of burn at the edge of the T-shirt sleeve is a comforting sensation that
fades as the colour changes and becomes a brown not red façade. The silence and the green and blue of the
day is as pleasing as the fact that I am not reddening anymore.
And now, this morning and yesterday morning I have the
rain. Today is heavier and has the
proper white noise mush of rainfall. In
Picton we would get this rain frequently.
It’s blanket noise, especially with the wriggly tin roof on the house,
was reassuring and a blissful release for the brain. The roof here is two floors further above me,
I have no idea what sort of noise is it producing but the rain outside,
occasionally enhanced by the sound of tyre on wet road, is singing a song this
morning; a bubble of lush sound heartening me.
It’s going to be time to venture out into it soon. The weather is warm, still, and the prospect
of a second sunny holiday Monday hoves into view. It’ll do me good to go out and get wet in
this for a while. To dampen any
smouldering skin before the weekend comes and I sit and burn it further. No wonder we sit and talk about the weather
so often when it has an affect on us beyond the simple idea of wet and dry,
warm and cold. It can, you see, knock us
head over heals.