Thursday, January 03, 2008

The Weather Report

The weather is grim in these here parts. Meteorologists are predicting gale force winds. Can Oz be far away???

It's raining. Storming. Pouring buckets. I know this because I was out in it this afternoon with no coat. I got wet. What the hell. I went to have lunch with my friend, S., which ended up being a quickie of sorts since she, poor thing, is one of those unfortunates who only gets a measly hour for lunch. After lunch, when S went back to her job where she actually gets paid (!), I went shoe shopping. My collection has been dwindling, and I need to restock.

Especially I need Uggs, since I threw out my pale green ones in a fit of cleaning this summer. Who knew that I would not be able to replace them this winter. I tried to get a new pair when I was in LA, but, eh!, I wanted red and they didn't have them in my size. And Elk Grove is not a shoe person's city--or maybe it is, but only if your taste runs to Target and Kohl's and Mervyn's (I cannot shop at Mervyn's for a number of reasons, not the least of which is the name. It's a nebbishey name. It doesn't speak of quality or taste or even proper fit). I went to Target. I went to Kohl's. They have the same shoes, mass-produced in the Hunan Province, with lead gromets for decor. And no boots. None. Evidently, it is no longer boot season in Northern California. This despite the fact one is never more than an hour or so away from snow up here.

So I am Uggless this winter. Bootless in a world of cruel wind and rain. Pity me. Feel my pain.

Actually I love this kind of weather, the stormier the better. I adored the various Blizzards of the Century that I lived through in Pennsylvania. I would sit in my office, which was the finished attic of our 100 year old house and look out the window at the snow piling up and think all those Robert Frostian thoughts about drifts and fences and roads taken or not. Perhaps this was because I was reading a lot of American lit for my PhD exams, but I like to think it was just the sheer poetry of the world outside. The windows would get frosted over, and then the condensation would freeze on the inside, because this was, after all, the attic of a 100 year old house and insulation was not a big deal when it was built. But I was wrapped in a down comforter. I had books to read and grand thoughts to think and much of life was then still in front of me. What wasn't to like....?

4 comments:

  1. I was loving this post and feeling your pain about the cold, uggless life - and then I saw something about PhD exams and now I am.... I am... there are no words for how I am. Except grievously behind on my tenth reading of The Scarlet Letter.

    EEE. Must. Finish. Degree. EEE.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I told you in my first comment on your blog that we seem to have a similar history--which makes reading each other's blogs SSSCCCAAARRREEEYYY.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous5:43 AM

    If you miss it, you can always come and visit Ohio. It's very cold here right now. I can even promise you the constant red-nosed chill that an uninsulated 130 year old house can provide. We don't allow any Robert Frost, however; you'll have to bring your own.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Jane you can buy UGGS at Nordstrom's right now and also online at www.zappos.com Free Shipping, and Free Shipping to return.

    ReplyDelete

So--whaddaya think?