They Call the Wind Mariah
Yesterday the rain let up for perhaps an hour, and I went for a walk. Down Queen Anne Hill there is this tiny park--you only know it’s a park because of the sign posted in front of it; otherwise you might mistake it for a traffic median. It contains a single oak tree and a strip of grass that isn’t even wide enough for a bench. As I walked past it the damp scent of old leaves rose, leeched upward from the ground by a warm familiar wind, a Chinook. These winds are not like other winds; they’re like friends, kindly and full of the earth and blooming with oxygen, and they come down off of the mountains to ease the bouts of cold in the autumn and early winter. I first met them in Colorado, and was more than pleasantly surprised to find they visit the Puget Sound as well. I would know them anywhere; that scent and that warmth are unmistakable. They were immortalized under another name in the otherwise missable musical Paint Your Wagon: “Mariah blows the stars around and sets the clouds a-flyin’/Mariah makes the mountains sound like folks out there were dyin’/Mariah, Mariah, they call the wind Mariah.” (Cute as that is, no one called the wind Mariah before the Kingston Trio wrote the song.) When that scent hit my nose I felt, for the first time since I’ve been back, not home--I define home differently now--but I was reminded of what home is. My relationship with Egypt is a bit like an arranged marriage; I love it because to live there without loving it would be unbearable. There is a particular kind of truth to love that arises from necessity rather than spontaneity or impulse or something French--it’s a truth not often acknowledged in this part of the world, but it is no less real for going unrecognized. It is, however, a tremendous lot of work. It felt good, standing there in the warm and the damp and the dusk, to love something simply because it was familiar and forgiving, and because I wanted to.
Posted by on 12/04 at 07:43 PM
Salamaat,
“...to love something simply because it was familiar and forgiving, and because I wanted to.”
Gorgeous. Thank you for sharing Willow.
Posted by
Maliha on 12/06 at 06:17 PM
Salaams Maliha,
Thank you. I admire your writing as well--it’s so lovely and delicate. I only started reading a few days ago (alerted by the BC nomination) and I’ve already burned through half your blog!
Posted by Willow on 12/06 at 09:28 PM
Salaam dear Willow,
I’ve met those warm, damp, scented winds here in SF - and in Islamabad too. They blew through here last week and when I closed my eyes I was a teenager standing in Islamabad again.
Funny how what we think is far away or past can sometimes be found within us.
Thanks for this beautiful reflection!
Warmly,
Baraka
Posted by
Baraka on 12/07 at 01:18 AM
Small correction: the song was written by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe, not the Kingston Trio (though I’d be interested to hear any recordings they may have of it).
Posted by
Jeremy Young on 12/08 at 02:50 PM
Salamaat Willow,
Thank you for your kind words and taking the time to read my “stuff”. I honestly blush when I get compliments on my writing, only because I am painfully aware of how much work I need to do (and the discipline involved) of perfecting the art. My blog is a play area, a series of rough draft canvasses that need serious polishing. Thank you for indulging me…
Posted by
Maliha on 12/08 at 04:59 PM
“There is a particular kind of truth to love that arises from necessity rather than spontaneity or impulse or something French”
Now that’s both very true and very funny, a perfect combination from an extraordinarily good writer
I know that wind too, and it is indeed like a good friend that surprises you happily when it visits.
Ya Haqq!
Posted by
irving on 12/10 at 11:20 PM
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Posted by
germanstuden on 07/25 at 10:24 PM
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