The weather’s been miserable here. We went through a bitterly cold period a couple of weeks ago. We’ve had a couple of other times when strong storms came through, thrashing us with heavy wind and deluging us with rain. By southern standards, it’s been a bad winter.
All the trees around my house look bare and lifeless. My back yard is littered with limbs and branches that I haven’t yet cleared away, debris from a couple of the recent storms. There’s one large tree branch — the one you see above — that crashed down one evening so close that it almost hit my house.
I was in the back yard Sunday afternoon looking at all the debris and the bare trees when I realized that what I was looking at matched the sour mood I’ve been feeling. It seems as though my heart has been experiencing winter for a long time. And then I remembered a simple question from an old song.
“Can you stand the weather — if winter lasts forever?”
And I don’t know how much more winter my heart can stand.

Loss of majestic tree in my yard feels like death of an old friend
Maturity asked me to learn that I’d never win certain arguments
Financial crisis seems serious when it hits your own neighbors
I’ll sell you a cookie-cutter home, but I wish you loved good design
Conservatives betray their own values when they mimic enemies
Few things scare humans like the prospect of living, dying alone
Why do tax dollars fund lavish lifestyles for bureaucrats?
Too many voices with little to say: Politics matters less and less to me