Thursday, February 19, 2009

I Can See Clearly Now...

When I attended the University of Virginia, I loved to sit outside on a clear spring day. The University has thousands of gorgeous old, huge trees lining walkways across huge expanses of grassy lawns. The new green leaves set against the brilliant blue sky with bright white clouds .... oh, I could lie on the soft green grass and stare through the tree boughs to the blue sky beyond and daydream for hours there.

Spring was all the more beautiful because it followed what was generally a long, cold, and dreary winter. Those of you who live in places such as Minnesota (or even Connecticut) will scoff at me for thinking it is cold in Virginia, but those of us who were born and raised in Florida find Virginia to be intolerably damp and frigid in January and February.

Spring in Virginia meant we could enjoy warmer weather, sunnier skies, bright flowers and green trees, and, best of all, summer vacation within a few short weeks. I loved it!

Then I moved to Arizona, where the winters are warm-ish and sunny and not very long at all. I still loved Spring. But it lost some of its cachet.

Spring, here, means that Summer is just around the corner. Summer. With temperatures exceeding 100 degrees day after day.... and sometimes even night after night in July before the monsoon season brings some cooling rain. Trees and grass turn crispy and brown from the heat and lack of rain. Car door handles and steering wheels are too hot to touch, ironically requiring the use of "driving gloves." (I never wear gloves while driving here in the winter. They are quite handy, however, in the summer.) Every summer, the local news crews find it amusing to pick a particularly hot day and show how one can fry an egg on the sidewalk.

Don't take all this the wrong way. I do not mean to complain. I live here for the simple reason that I prefer those 100-plus super hot days every year to the cold and wet Winters in Virginia. But that doesn't mean I have to love the heat. There is, after all, the concept of "too much of a good thing."

In Arizona, Autumn** is wonderful, coming, as it does, after the seemingly interminable blazing hot summer, and being the harbinger of cooler days and nights to come. Finally along about Halloween you can count on evening temperatures below 80 degrees. November and December are generally delightful, weather-wise. January is sometimes a bit chilly for my liking, but February perks right up again. Yes, Autumn, leading as it does straight to the beautiful Winter season, quickly became my favorite time of year here.

But the beauty of an Arizona Autumn differs substantially from the beauty of a Virginia Spring. Instead of spending hours outside staring at the new green leaves on the trees in April, thanking the heavens and Mother Nature for the beauty that is Spring, I focused more on the newly re-discovered Autumn wonders of warm (not hot!) evening walks, colorful sunsets, moonlit clouds, and cool night breezes.

None of these amazing experiences particularly requires eagle-sharp eyesight to enjoy them, and so I did not immediately notice that my eyesight had diminished.

In fact, it took at least a year before I noticed that I couldn't read street signs from very far away while driving on the freeway. Then another season or two so before I realized that I was having a bit of trouble reading street signs at all while driving.

So I had my eyes checked. Sure enough, I needed corrective lenses. My eyes aren't terribly bad; I am not even required to wear corrective lenses while driving. In fact, I can see cars, people, animals, lane lines, traffic lights -- everything that is necessary to avoid crashing my car. But I much prefer to see well, not merely adequately, while I drive, since it makes it so much easier to find the correct exit on the freeway.

And so I faced the reality that my eyes were no longer perfect, and it was time to remedy that problem.

I first tried wearing contact lenses, but I never could learn to put the darn things in my eyes efficiently. It took me 45 minutes every morning -- time I knew I would rather spend doing something else. Sleeping, for example, is always a good thing to do early in the morning. I had no problem at all taking the contact lenses out of my eyes in the evening; it seemed somehow normal to me to *remove* an item from my eye. But every reflex and fiber of my being resisted my attempts to place those foreign objects (er, I mean, "contact lenses") into my eyes each morning. And once I had them in, I spent most of the day squinting and blinking and applying eye drops, trying to keep my eyes moist enough so they didn't hurt. (Did I mention the average summer humidity here ranges from 12% to 50%? Compare that with Northern Virginia's range of 55% to 90%, and you can see how my eyes might have had a bit of trouble adjusting...)

I am a persistent person. I do not give up easily. But after several months of this ridiculous 45 minute ritual every morning and the subsequent all-day squinting and squirting marathon, I conceded defeat. I would have to wear glasses.

I fretted about wearing glasses. I was vain enough to wonder whether I would look older, less "cool" (my kids would probably question whether I was ever really "cool," but I sure thought I was), or less pretty (a fellow in college once said I had "eyes a guy could lose his soul in"; I didn't want to cover them up!). More importanly, I hadn't the foggiest idea how to go about picking frames that "matched" my face and looked stylish. I scoured magazines for photos of celebrities or models wearing glasses, looking for fashion guidance, but such photos were few and far between.

Eventually, I swallowed my pride and vanity, took along my husband and a friend for fashion advice, and picked out some frames for my corrective lenses. I found some that looked cute, and I bought them. I loved them immediately because I could read street signs and I did not have to squint.

And then Spring rolled around. All I could say was, Wow! I could see every leaf on every tree for the first time in years! They were so green, and so distinctly individual, and so... beautiful.

I love Spring again. It is once more the most beautiful of all the seasons. I can see the bees as they buzz around the flowers. I can see the individual petals on the flowers, rather than just a blur of color. I can see the difference between the new bright green needles on our pine tree and the older dark green needles left over from last season. I can see the stamens peeking from the cactus flowers. I can see the pouffy cloud shapes and the wispy hazy clouds and the feathers on the birds, and the hummingbird beaks (we have lots of hummingbirds here in Arizona) and the patterns on the butterfly wings. In short, I can see the wonder and the beauty and the fantastic bounty of nature that I missed for years!

Maybe it wasn't the heat, after all, that caused me to lose my enthusiasm for Spring. Maybe it was the fact that I just couldn't see it very well. Because here it is, more than 15 years after I got my first pair of glasses, and I still love Spring in Arizona.


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** In Virginia, we used to call it "Fall," presumably because the leaves would fall from the trees (and I loved the Fall, too, in Virginia. It had its own rather melancholy beauty, but I'll write about that some other time). Here, the word Autumn seems more fitting. There are some deciduous trees, of course, but they are outnumbered by the evergreen trees and cacti, so that one barely notices that some of the trees are missing their leaves. We have a plum tree, an apple tree, and a pear tree in our yard that lose their leaves about mid-winter, but they are surrounded by the pine trees, the eucalyptus tree, the orange tree, and the various desert shrubs (like the Mexican Red Bird of Paradise) which keep their leaves. There is no noticeable leaf-falling here in the valley of the sun.
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10 comments:

SkylersDad said...

When my eyes could no longer tolerate contacts (Colorado humidity averages about 20%) and I tired of my glasses, I had Lasik done. Best decision I have ever made!

Karin said...

Love your description of the seasons! I simply loved the spring and autumn while we lived in KY, but the summer with its heat and humidity was a different story. The winter wasn't anything like our Canadian winters and I laughed when the schools were closed because of an inch of snow!!

We spent a few weeks in Palm Springs last February. I wondered why everything was so lush and green, flowers blooming etc., but quite a few trees had no leaves. I thought maybe they'd suffered a blight. I asked the gardener and he had this puzzled look on his face. "Ma'am," he said, "it's winter."

Nan said...

You attended Mr. Jefferson's One Mistake? As a Hokie, I'm shocked to learn that.

Charlottesville and the changing seasons in Virginia are gorgeous, though. Not as nice as Blacksburg, but close. I always thought Virginia, at least along the Blue Ridge, got the seasons just about right -- none last long enough to be annoying, whereas farther north (Michigan, for example) Winter seems to drag on forever and farther south (Georgia) Summer heat and humidity lasts too long.

David said...

I used to love the fall more than spring. Spring was "muddy", wet and damp. Fall was Football!!!
Now, in the "autumn" of my life, I am a fall guy!
Some days literally!!

Fancy Schmancy said...

I have to wear glasses over contacts, too, but I've been doing it for years and I'm used to it. Eventually I'll probably have Lasik done, but I'm still a little leary of.

Spring is my favorite too, although autumn in CT is beautiful, it always reminds me winter is coming...

John D. said...

I'm sure at some point you tol me you went to U.Va., but I had forgotten. For a trip down memory lane, go to my friend Jack's site: www.jacklooney.com. Index > Other galleries > U.Va.

(I would have given you a direct hot link, but I can't; it's a Flash site)

: )

LegalMist said...

John: thanks for the link. I enjoyed the beautiful photos of one of my favorite places... things have changed a bit since I was there, but his photos do capture the beauty and spirit of the place.

Green said...

I've worn contacts since 8th grade. It took me an HOUR to get my contacts in when I first started wearing them. But I've always hated wearing glasses and was absolutely determined to make contacts work. When I got down to it only taking 15 minutes, I deemed Project Contact Lenses a success.

My father was just telling me that he got new contacts that allow five times more oxygen into his eyes (through the contacts, I think). If you're interested, I can find out the brand for you.

LegalMist said...

Hi Green, Thanks for stopping by. I've resigned myself to no longer being the beauty queen; glasses are easy and I can take them off when I want to see something up close (I only need them for far away things), and I've got a pair I really like now, so I'm sticking with the tried & true... I do appreciate your kind offer, though!

Janie Junebug said...

My high school boyfriend is a prof at UVA. I wouldn't let my daughter apply there because she looks so much like me and I was scared she would happen across him. That's how evil he is.