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Ellen A. Wilkin

Writer: Novels, Poetry, Essays, Biography, Memoir
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All content copyright Ellen A. Wilkin unless otherwise noted.

Cumulus clouds appearing to be chased by Cirrus clouds.

Cloud Diary

February 16, 2022 in Anxiety, Introversion, Poetry, Relationships, Writer's Life, Creating

December 27th

I wish to tell a tale of winter. It shows up with the outlines of a Norman Rockwell painting. Cold that rosies the cheek. Wind you must lean into (a wreath hung over one arm). Neighbors bent over snow shovels and so bundled up that you do not recognize them. Snow that connects one house to the next with a deep powder. Bleak skies of stratus clouds giving way to clear blue with patchworks of white. And when there is just enough moisture and uplift, the skies fill with fancy. Cumulus clouds disguised as clams shake from the soft sand. Dragons arch their wings. 1950s alien spacecraft puff by. And one tiny exhalation from our lungs disappears into BIG WIND. (Later, it will swirl and dance across the plains looking very much like Ginger Rogers in search of Fred Astaire.)

December 28th

I.
It was a long summer of clear blue skies. Not a shred of white anywhere. Today clouds dot that blue. After months of stretching out in lounge chairs sipping martinis or pilsners under perfect crystal blue, we mark the invasion. Some clouds know to swarm together and kidnap the sun!

But I know the secret of clouds.

II.
Several horses run by the window. Manes flowing, galloping east. They fly even before I’ve opened my eyes. I am sure of it. I could lay on the brown earth, look up and watch, even though it is well into winter. But I sit here, tea cooling at my elbow, watching. Castles with towering turrets. A bouquet of roses – each flower waving in the active air. Steam locomotives carrying passengers to Swiss chalets. Rabbits, round and fluffy. Albert Einstein, bristly mustache and wild hair.

Cumulus clouds hang over the Front Range.

December 30th

I.
The wind trundled the bed and shook the window panes this morning. “Time to get up! Before they fly!” The light grows and the moon dims and birds begin to wake. Finches twitter and squawk in the mugo pine, jumping from limb to limb under the canopy. The tufts of branches wave to the waning moon. The neighbors’ wind chimes clang and bell. The sound of my breathing mingles with the exhalations of the furnace and the hush of early morning traffic. So much dry air.

II.
A bright fingernail moon hangs in the southern sky. Cumulus clouds scoot by on steady gusts, backed by a field of blue. A ragtag bison gallops by, catching the first rays of the sun in its fur. Then a wayward breeze brings with it a brown wash. It smudges the moon. The wind billows in the eaves, rattles the window panes. The wash thickens, then dissolves in one swift moment. A rag gets caught in the rails of the fence. It twitches with each breath of wind.

Winter is here: shorter days, lower temperatures, wind. But with the late morning breezes, the clouds scatter. The sun pours down, at first a delight, then a baleful glare. The bird bath is empty. No hint of rain. No sleet. No snow.

III.
A snow storm is announced for New Year’s Eve. I plan to snuggle down with my sweetie and a glass of champagne. Watch flakes fall and accumulate on the ground and on every structure in sight. Safe and warm inside. For now, it is blue sky and a dancer in a tutu leaping across it in a jeté. She is the last act. Those thoughtful, whipped cotton clouds will soon be no more.

December 31st

I.
Clouds can carry smoke, not moisture. Turncoats.

II.
Yesterday afternoon, even while blue clung to the horizon, I smelled smoke. I shifted around the house like a zombie, watching the horizon. Clouds shifted and silted. Winds gusted over 100mph, pushing brown and orange puffs up the Front Range from the south. A small brush fire was reported just 10 miles west. It was soon snuffed out. Another fire 20 miles away roared: downed power lines had ignited the tall grasses of the high desert plain.

Yesterday, the celebrated snow did not come. By nightfall while fires still raged, that was a blessing. Piles of snow can smother flame, but also people. Hundreds of houses crumbled to ash and thousands of people ran for their lives. They did not stop to grab a coat. They grabbed their families. Meanwhile, all around them burnished clouds billowed.

III.
I still wish to tell a tale of winter. But I don’t know all the secrets of clouds.

This morning the Twin Sisters wear a smudged cloak. The sun rises bright and white, then disappears in gray. But fear crackles in the silence. Clouds bring burning.

I pass by the window. A patch of blue still clings to the horizon. It is now encircled in white. I choose sides: I will it to snow. I pull out the yoga mat and, just as I bow to loving kindness, my eye catches the first fall.

Then it snowed, dear reader. All day and into the night. Glorious tufts! Swirling with elan! A release of power! As if winter had been working all along to ease the pain of drought and had finally broken through clouds that it had not sent.

Our front yard on New Year’s Eve as the storm finally hit.

January 1st

I.
There is a huge pearl blanket overhead and a foot of snow on the ground. Holiday lights seem brighter than before, shining from inside white cocoons. House finches, gold finches brave the cold. A junco flies up to the squirrel baffle. She pecks at the seed caught there by the snow, then races to the ground. A squirrel plows through the drifts. He dives, then comes back up, shaking his fur and munching on sunflower husks and dropped seed. We nickname him The Surfing Squirrel.

The mugo pine is a warren. Song birds shelter in its branches in-between forays for seed. Some branches reach up with white mittens toward a gray sky. Others, weighed down with snow, bend towards the center, overlapping and creating nesting spots all the way down to the ground. “Cheerie! Cheerie!” The chickadees are here! They are the only ones who can call out with such cheer on a cold winter morning.

II.
A new shower of snow comes down with an insistence that demands respect. Please douse the remaining fires! Please smother the lasting fear and doubt! Now that you have finally arrived – good timing Old Man Winter! – please lift the veil just a little. Just enough to conduct people without homes to a safe and warm place. Just enough that those who have homes to return to, or those who were on the cusp of evacuating, have heat and light and food. Just enough that they have safe drinking water and all the supplies they need to get through this Cold Open of a New Year.

III.
My husband and I. We two. Together. Matching bowls of soup in front of the fire. An open bottle of wine. We are each other. The birds outside the window attenuate our relationship through glass.

Out of the corner of my eye, I see a face peak in the window. I turn. It is gone.

Simple and Sweet. Then twisting. Wild magic strikes, then turning, steals away. Sunlight parts clouds and caresses the wound. Then brown clouds return, ready to pierce through the peace of another day. They dissolve into innocent white. And I gather. I gather the secrets of clouds.

— Ellen A. Wilkin

Note: I wrote this piece in response to the Marshall Fire that began south of Boulder, Colorado on December 30th 2021, right before a heavy snowfall was predicted. It was fully contained in a few days. No one in my family or among my friends was directly affected, except for some folks who had to evacuate, but returned safely to their homes. Hundreds of others lost their homes.

Tags: #winter storm, #fire, #clouds, #self awareness
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Photo by Retro Perspective Studios

Photo by Retro Perspective Studios

Welcome to my blog. I write about writing, performing while being an introvert, science in every day life, nature next door, low-carbon-lifestyle, gardening and cooking, relationships, travel, depression/anxiety, and feminism. With Humor. Mostly.

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The Eleanor Vase
The Eleanor Vase
There are times when I just sit and think
There are times when I just sit and think
Dyer's Cottage
Dyer's Cottage
Dressing up and recreating Rockwell
Dressing up and recreating Rockwell
Birdwatching
Birdwatching
  • January 2025
    • Jan 19, 2025 Public Reading and Signing of my poetry book, Snow Signals Jan 19, 2025
    • Jan 16, 2025 I'd Like a Cosmopolitan Jan 16, 2025
  • March 2023
    • Mar 1, 2023 Winter-Spring Essay 2023: Couple Improves House Mar 1, 2023
  • February 2022
    • Feb 16, 2022 Cloud Diary Feb 16, 2022
  • November 2021
    • Nov 29, 2021 Clouds Nov 29, 2021
  • July 2021
    • Jul 2, 2021 Dave as a Beer Jul 2, 2021
  • January 2021
    • Jan 23, 2021 Happy Winter! Jan 23, 2021
  • February 2020
    • Feb 22, 2020 Winter Poem Feb 22, 2020
    • Feb 22, 2020 Winter Letter 2019/2020 Feb 22, 2020
    • Feb 11, 2020 The Bells Feb 11, 2020
  • November 2019
    • Nov 28, 2019 If You Can’t Find a Friend Nov 28, 2019
  • October 2019
    • Oct 5, 2019 Weird Oct 5, 2019
    • Oct 2, 2019 I Was Writer in Residence at the Gloucester Writer's Center Oct 2, 2019
  • September 2019
    • Sep 10, 2019 Calling Inspiration Sep 10, 2019
  • June 2019
    • Jun 6, 2019 Even After My Death Jun 6, 2019
  • February 2019
    • Feb 22, 2019 Blue, What Are You? Feb 22, 2019
    • Feb 17, 2019 Great Horned Owl Feb 17, 2019
    • Feb 2, 2019 Winter Letter 2018/2019 Feb 2, 2019
    • Feb 2, 2019 Finding a Connection Feb 2, 2019
  • January 2019
    • Jan 15, 2019 Reaching for the Horizon Jan 15, 2019
  • December 2018
    • Dec 31, 2018 Timpano Feast: Ring in the New Year with a Big Night Dec 31, 2018
    • Dec 27, 2018 Christmas Mouse Dec 27, 2018
  • November 2018
    • Nov 20, 2018 Bottomful Pancakes Nov 20, 2018
  • October 2018
    • Oct 23, 2018 Rembrandt's Prints at the DAM Oct 23, 2018
  • August 2018
    • Aug 20, 2018 A Little Package From Across the Pond Aug 20, 2018
  • July 2018
    • Jul 11, 2018 The Field Car Jul 11, 2018
  • April 2018
    • Apr 20, 2018 Pillars Apr 20, 2018
    • Apr 11, 2018 ArtSpeak Collaboration: Julie Clement & Ellen Wilkin Apr 11, 2018
  • March 2018
    • Mar 20, 2018 The Dancing Giant Mar 20, 2018
  • February 2018
    • Feb 22, 2018 Bird Catalog Feb 22, 2018
    • Feb 13, 2018 The Workings of the Heart Feb 13, 2018
  • January 2018
    • Jan 26, 2018 Before the Ice Melts Jan 26, 2018
    • Jan 19, 2018 Winter Letter 2017-2018 Jan 19, 2018
  • December 2017
    • Dec 31, 2017 My Own Take on the Artist Prayer from The Artist Way by J. Cameron Dec 31, 2017
    • Dec 23, 2017 Secular Rewrite of Basic Principles (from Artist's Way by J. Cameron) Dec 23, 2017
    • Dec 20, 2017 The Party Had Been a Roaring Success Dec 20, 2017
    • Dec 3, 2017 Space Dec 3, 2017
  • November 2017
    • Nov 17, 2017 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: The Chateau d'Angers and the Apocalypse Tapestry Nov 17, 2017
    • Nov 16, 2017 I Was on the Radio Talking about Bus Rapid Transit in Boulder County Nov 16, 2017
  • October 2017
    • Oct 26, 2017 Run Carrot Run! Oct 26, 2017
    • Oct 5, 2017 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Angers Cheer, Foreign Language Laundry, and Still Bugged Oct 5, 2017
  • September 2017
    • Sep 27, 2017 Still Not Fitting In Sep 27, 2017
  • August 2017
    • Aug 2, 2017 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Chinon Fortress, the Reluctant Bishop, and Another Wine Cave Aug 2, 2017
  • June 2017
    • Jun 29, 2017 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Abbey at Fontevraud, Eleanor's Final Resting Place Jun 29, 2017
  • April 2017
    • Apr 27, 2017 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Unable to Speak at Le Mans; Grumpy Gus; Kindness, Rudeness, then Irony in Saumur Apr 27, 2017
    • Apr 18, 2017 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Reflections on Time Travel, Traveler Angst, and What One's Protagonist Might Do Apr 18, 2017
  • March 2017
    • Mar 23, 2017 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Mont Saint-Michel, Tidal Flats, Monk Footprints, and Gloomy Crypts Mar 23, 2017
    • Mar 9, 2017 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Roundabouts and Ring Roads, 800 Years Too Early, and the Bayeux Tapestry Mar 9, 2017
  • February 2017
    • Feb 16, 2017 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Standing with Lions, Stumbling on an Archaeological Dig, and Shooing a Fly Feb 16, 2017
    • Feb 15, 2017 Days Feb 15, 2017
    • Feb 1, 2017 Dear Humans: Happy Winter 2016-2017! Feb 1, 2017
  • January 2017
    • Jan 24, 2017 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Bill the Bastard's Birthplace, Cider, and Road Rage Jan 24, 2017
    • Jan 9, 2017 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Tough, Alone, and Inspired Jan 9, 2017
    • Jan 1, 2017 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Building a Castle at Guédelon Jan 1, 2017
  • December 2016
    • Dec 17, 2016 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: A Drive through Burgundy Dec 17, 2016
    • Dec 8, 2016 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Exploring the Middle Ages at the Cluny Dec 8, 2016
  • November 2016
    • Nov 30, 2016 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Unexpected Pleasure in Dresden Nov 30, 2016
    • Nov 21, 2016 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Half Destroyed and Living History Nov 21, 2016
    • Nov 10, 2016 Eight-Week Eruope Solo Travel: The Eleanor Vase! Geek Out! Nov 10, 2016
    • Nov 2, 2016 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Paris. Where to Pee? In Subway, at Louvre, or Directly on EurRail Pass? Nov 2, 2016
  • October 2016
    • Oct 26, 2016 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Don't Turn Right at the Left Bank Oct 26, 2016
    • Oct 20, 2016 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Show Me the Gang Plank! Oct 20, 2016
    • Oct 12, 2016 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Writing and Laundry Oct 12, 2016
    • Oct 5, 2016 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travel 2011: Dance & Sing & Meditate on Board Oct 5, 2016
  • September 2016
    • Sep 28, 2016 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travelogue 2011: Aboard Wednesday, AM Sep 28, 2016
    • Sep 21, 2016 Eight-Week Europe Solo Travelogue 2011: A NYC Moment Sep 21, 2016
    • Sep 14, 2016 Write Everywhere Portable Desk Sep 14, 2016
    • Sep 7, 2016 Escaping from the Self-Hating Negativity Jungle of Jealousy Sep 7, 2016
  • August 2016
    • Aug 23, 2016 So, You're Walking! Aug 23, 2016
    • Aug 10, 2016 Not Enough Daves Aug 10, 2016
    • Aug 3, 2016 Dany Aug 3, 2016
  • July 2016
    • Jul 28, 2016 Sketch: Meditation on Meditation Jul 28, 2016
    • Jul 13, 2016 Addicted to Spider Solitaire Jul 13, 2016
    • Jul 8, 2016 The Quest Jul 8, 2016
  • June 2016
    • Jun 9, 2016 My Dinners with Julia Jun 9, 2016
  • April 2016
    • Apr 11, 2016 Forgotten Past Re-Emerges in Digital Age Apr 11, 2016