Finally, the long cold winter is over
and spring has arrived. Or as I call it, the blister season.
Don’t get me wrong, I love spring.
Winter can be kind of brutal in these parts. For example, it’s just plain wrong
to have what seems like no more than five hours of daylight per day. Notice I
didn’t say “sunshine” per day, since during the winter months we can easily go two
weeks at a stretch with nothing but a thick gray cover of clouds. And it’s very
depressing to wake up in the morning, turn on the radio, and hear the
weatherman say (in an annoyingly cheery voice, of course), “It’s four degrees
outside right now! But relief is in sight, as it should reach the upper teens
this afternoon.”
So, I’m thrilled spring is finally here,
and I’m relieved that I made it through another winter season without
frostbite, hypothermia, or skidding off an icy road into the guardrails. But at
least during the winter I never get blisters.
As soon as the weather warmed up
recently, when the last ugly brown snow bank along the side of the road finally
melted, my first thought was to lace up the ol’ sneakers and take a brisk walk
in the warm sunshine. The first half-mile of my springtime walk was great. But
then something reminded me that “ol’ sneakers” is not just a quaint expression.
My ratty Converse All Stars are in fact really, REALLY old. Any cushioning they might have once provided wore
out sometime during the Carter Administration. Specifically, the something that
reminded me my sneakers soon will be old enough to join A.A.R.P. was pain — a
hot, shooting pain, which emanated from my left heel, my right pinkie toe, and
the balls of both of my feet.
My purposeful, brisk stride was suddenly
reduced to a slow, gingerly limp — making me look like I should’ve joined
A.A.R.P. a few decades ago. At this point I discovered a sad fact: if you walk
a half-mile in a straight line directly away from your house, there is no way
to return home without walking another half-mile. (Must be some kind of math
thing.) I was tempted to call home and beg for a ride, but I forgot to bring my
cell phone.
When I finally returned to my house, all
I wanted to do was peel off my sneakers and stick my feet into an ugly brown
snow bank, or, since they all had melted, a bucket of ice water. But my wife
had other ideas. As I limped up the driveway, she greeted me with a smile — and
a rake. “Here,” she said. “You start in the front yard. I’ll start in the
back.”
So, a couple of hours later, I not only
had blisters all over my feet, but after raking up all the sticks and leaves
and pine cones and dead possums that had accumulated on our lawn over the last
six months, I had blisters on both hands as well. (Oh yeah, I also had a
blister on my nose since I forgot to wear a hat or apply any sunscreen.)
That evening I tried to ignore the pain
as I took turns dipping various appendages into a bucket of ice water. My feet
were screaming, my hands were raw, and my nose looked like W.C. Fields, only
larger and redder. But when I looked out the window and saw it was still light
outside even though it was approaching 8 p.m. — and not just gray filtered
winter daylight, but actual springtime SUNSHINE
— I said with a smile, “This is still a whole lot better than
winter!”
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