So many leaves — what did I expect mid-November. As soon
as I pressure my daughter into raking them, it rains
that evening. What’s left on the ground, a damp and soggy
mess and then, dry in the morning, with one strong gust, more
wind-blown-into-my-yard kin conceal the grass. Depending
upon who I watch or what I read, I’m left confused about
leaves. Neighbors make a ruckus with their leaf blowers,
intent to not leave one behind. An article on the internet
encourages readers not to rake leaves, intones:
leaves provide benefits to the environment. Placed over flower
beds, mulched and let to lie, leaves protect plants and supply
nutrients. Squished into a rusty, old red wheelbarrow —
several bags filled with leaves. I cart them to the curb,
remembering the October day my daughter, tiny at two, plunked
on a pile of leaves, pure bliss across her face as she threw leaves
and more leaves into the air, her head tilted to the sky, she
watched
leaves tumble to the ground. Leaves covered her legs, her torso,
almost covered her entire body. The beauty
of autumn leaves glazing the grass, the day drenched in sunshine
before what we didn’t yet know, thirty years ago, would be
an evening of wind and rain and in morning,
we’d awake to fields of snow.
©