I come from Maine, the first place in the whole country touched by the sun each morning. In Maine, it’s a friendly, playful sun; warm in the summer, really nothing more than a decoration in the winter. It does its job, providing enough light to wake up the sap in the spring and carry on the functions of photosynthesis in the plant life. Gardens grow, the lawns push up like clockwork, berries ripen and the light glitters and dances playfully on the blue water. Sometimes it flares up…a handful of days in the summer when it feels like the Mojave Desert and then dies back down to rest from its work.
I like the sun. Where would we be without it? Balanced the perfect distance to keep from burning up or freezing, our home planet relies on it for our very existence. As teenagers, my sisters and I would slather on baby oil (who knew anything about skin cancer then?), spread out a quilt and lie in its paltry northern Maine rays hoping for an exotic Mediterranean tan.
In winter, the sun plays hide and seek. My curtains would be open wide as I eagerly attempted to catch some light and warmth on a little section of my living room floor. Its light is a balm during the long shadowy days of gray and white, and when it begins to creep back in the spring, prying loose the icy grip of that season…joy!
For four years we lived in New Zealand; a temperate country resting so on the curve of the earth that it escapes the extremes of its neighbor, Australia. In northern New Zealand, near Auckland, the temperature rarely rises above 80° in summer or below 45 or so in winter. But the sun there has a dangerous quality, because of the ozone layer, or lack thereof, above the country. There are more cases of skin cancer in New Zealand per capita than anywhere on earth. We could feel it…an incandescent quality that wasn’t so much hot as dangerous. You didn’t realize you were tipping some balance under the surface of your skin because you weren’t broiling from the heat. It was still a glorious sun, but one that needed minding.
Now I’ve moved to the Midwest and something has happened to the sun. Someone has replaced it with a meaner, hotter cousin. That glowing orb in the sky is making every effort to commune with the core of the earth, sending spears of white hot light pregnant with some throbbing insistent meaning. The ground is hot. The road could be one of those radiant heat floors. The tile in this house is warm, even without the direct rays of this other sun. As it rises in the morning, there is no progression from friendly, yellow and slightly warm. It starts out nuclear strength and it scorches its way in a high, even path along a straight line, just like the roads here. When it joins forces with the wind that “comes sweeping ‘cross the plains”, all I can think of is sirocco – that hot dusty wind from North Africa.
When the sun sets in the West it is a glowing pink ball; gorgeous and a little frightening. It seems like the smoldering embers of a very hot fire. I love to watch it slip away, but when it’s gone I have an undeniable sense of relief. Phew…made it through this day without spontaneously combusting.
I’m new here. When people meet me they ask how I like the heat, or, to quote… “How do you like our weather?” When I agree that it’s very hot, or that I’m withering or that I can’t believe how hot it still is (it’s September, for goodness sake!), they have a complacent, satisfied look. It says, we know it and we love it and in some oblique way we’re responsible for it. I’ve probably had that very same look in winter in Maine after a blizzard or three weeks of below 0°.
What it really reveals is that sense of satisfaction that there are things about our lives that we might not like at first, but we live through. We tough it out, we embrace it, and then we brag about it. Okies deserve to look complacent, because while I’m warily getting to know him, they’ve made peace with my sun’s cousin.
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