I woke up to a beautiful cloudy morning. The sky seemed wrapped in a soft grey shawl A fine drizzle fell all around. It has been long since we have had a proper rain. Even after the last snowfall, the soil remained strangely thirsty. Since the monsoon withdrew, the land has waited in patience. So today, even though it is just a fine drizzle, every drop feels like a small blessing.
There is a particular gratitude that rises from the ground when rain returns. I felt it as I stepped outside. At last, a little water for the saplings and the newly planted trees that have stood bravely through the cold and the dry winds. Even the newly planted fruit trees were thirsty. It is only a drizzle, but in the mountains even a drizzle can be a quiet act of mercy, especially during this dry spell.
Across the hillside, farmers have sown potatoes, peas, beans and a host of other vegetables. For them too, every drop that falls from the sky is nothing less than a blessing. It settles gently into the earth, easing the labour of many hands, and promising food, sustenance, money, and hope in the months to come.
The birds seemed to know it too. The resident blue whistling thrush, who lives just outside my window, announced the morning with a clear, ringing call, full of a cheerfulness that had been absent these past weeks. The plants swayed in the light breeze as though relieved. They do not have faces, yet anyone who has lived closely with trees and shrubs learns to read their moods. A certain brightness in the leaves, and a way of responding to the wind. Some may call it my imagination gone wild. I prefer to think of it as companionship.
Such weather tempts one towards laziness. A hot cup of coffee, a loving book, and the comfort of a couch seem far more appealing than any duty. But I am not blessed with endless amount of money. So I carried my coffee to the desk and tried to be industrious, even as my thoughts drifted towards the mist moving lazily among the trees. There is a quiet joy in watching clouds travel across the hillside, as though the sky itself has descended to pay a visit.
The firewood I had laid out in the sun now lies damp again. Yet this is hardly a misfortune. The sun will return soon and dry it. The rain was needed more than dry logs. Though, we shall need many more such showers if the orchard is to flourish in spring, and in the summer to provide us with a good harvest of fruits.
A few days ago, a neighbour and I were speaking of weather. He wondered why rain and snow are so often called bad weather. Perhaps sailors, fearing storms at sea, gave it that name. But here in the hills, rain is the most generous of the guests. Each drop falls like nectar, reviving tired roots, replenishing underground streams, and filling reservoirs hidden beneath rock and soil. The rivulets that begin as shy trickles on these slopes will swell into streams and end up as rivers that nourish distant plains and countless lives. If one looks at the larger picture, the well-being of whole communities far below depends upon these modest showers in the mountains. How then can we call it bad weather?
No, this is good weather! This is life arriving quietly, without fanfare, in silver threads from the sky. Hoping and praying for more such mornings, I sit here mesmerized by the feel of this morning drizzle.
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