Gluggavadur

“Window weather.”

That is literally what gluggavadur means in Icelandic.

It is the type of weather that you enjoy from inside your house looking out a window at weather – as one writer put it – “that would freeze your eyelids off” if you went out in it.

I well know the feeling. Until now, I never knew there was a word for it in any language.

It is a feeling I often conjure up when I am nostalgic. It is a cozy, wrapped in a fleece blanket, toes covered in thick woolen socks, nothing can harm me and a pervasive inner feeling of peace.

We recently added an electric fireplace to our home. It is the cherry on top when it comes to enjoying gluggavadur. It was an annual ritual when I lived in colder climes to haul in the cordwood for the winter to keep the hearth going.

These days, I live in the American South. Famous for promoting its’ perpetually sunny weather and the white sandy beaches that stretch in photos as far as the eye can see.

I am reminded of Albert Hammond’s 1972 hit, “It Never Rains in Southern California.” The dream of living in a particular place eventually gives way to the reality of your environs and day-to-day living conditions.

I live in another part of the American South where sun, sea and sand are not daily occurrences. It is equally beautiful in its way but hot, sunny weather is hardly perpetual.

There has been frost in the mornings this winter. Some mornings we have to wear long pants and a jacket or sweater to go out and about.

By now, I know my Northern friends are shaking their heads and muttering “cry me a river” under their breath.

I know they are living surrounded by a ton of snow and dress in long underwear, a down jacket, three more layers, mittens, toque, ear muffs and Kodiak snowboots. And that’s just to go out to get the mail at the front door.

Here we practice our own Southern special type of gluggavadur. We sit at the patio door windows and watch birds flit to and from the bird feeders. we try to gauge how much higher the bamboo grew overnight.

Still, there is a small part of me (a very small part, I grant you) that misses my former mid-winter days of gluggavadur up North.

There were some winter days when I sat beside the kitchen window sipping a fresh coffee and looking out at untouched brilliant white snow in the backyard.

Trees surrounded the periphery of the backyard and their boughs dipped low to the ground, heavy after yet another recent record snowfall.

Part of the emotional and spiritual appeal on those days was appreciating how perfect and beautiful it was outside. Appreciating that the beauty was created not by human hands but by the inherent divine forces of nature, whatever we conceive them to be.

I remember this very sentiment was so well expressed by American poet Joyce Kilmer in his poem, Trees.

I think that I shall never see
A poem lovely as a tree.

A tree whose hungry mouth is prest
Against the earth’s sweet flowing breast;

A tree that looks at God all day,
And lifts her leafy arms to pray;

A tree that may in summer wear 
A nest of robins in her hair;

Upon whose bosom snow has lain;
Who intimately lives with rain.

Poems are made by fools like me,
But only God can make a tree.

Joyce Kilmer, 1886 – 1918

We have trees to look out on from our patio. They are comforting and stalwart.

In a world full of chaos and instability, trees and the gluggavadur that comes from looking out at them is comforting, regardless of the weather.

Sounds like Kilmer fully appreciated whatever he saw from his kitchen window, with or without the need for a cup of coffee or mulled cider to warm his hands.

Maybe they should consider renaming Kilmer’s poem, Gluggavadur. Maybe it already is in the Icelandic translation.

Leaving on a Jet Plane

I’d like to say all my bags are packed and I’m ready to go. I’m not. That is what I will do today.

I used to love travel. I remember the excitement in getting ready for a big trip. And there were some very big trips in my life.

From my home base in Canada, I flew to Sri Lanka for a three month walking trek and sojourn through India and Nepal. On another occasion, I flew to Seoul Korea to connect with my family on tiny and dazzling beautiful black sand Jeju Island off South Korea’s coast.

Then there was the southern sojourn to Argentina to take a ten day horse trek across the Andes. And I once flew due North and landed in Iqaluit, Nunavut for several frost filled days to attend the Arctic Winter Games.

Many writers laud the benefits of travel. I do. It changes you. It broadens your perspective on so many things. It can shatter the illusion of cultural superiority that some secretly harbor if they have not travelled very far from their home base.

One look at a carved monument in almost any country should knock that out of your system pretty quickly. Not always, of course. But often.

Travel is a kind of education that you cannot replicate by reading books. Books stimulate the imagination. Travel stimulates the senses. Nothing could replace the overwhelming sights and sounds of a spice market in New Delhi, India.

Celebrating Holi, the festival of colors, is one of the most unique occasions I’ve ever taken part in. In under an hour, me and my traveling companions were physically drenched in a dozen colors from handfuls of special chalk thrown at us. Deliberately!

As you wander the streets of New Delhi (or anywhere in India on that unique, special holiday), everyone is equally streaked with multiple colors of dust.

Indians generally have a great sense of occasion. Nothing can match the style and splendor of an Indian wedding drenched in rich fabrics, brilliant colors and enticing smells.

When most of my college buddies were working at traditional summer jobs after the term was over, I spent every summer traveling on some pretense or another. Europe. First as a waitress in a massive tourist hotel and the following summer as a student. Then Egypt as a student after my third year.

After graduation, I spent several months traipsing through Asia. So many indelible memories. So much experience and learning – mostly good.

I am leaving my country again. This time, on a more permanent basis. We cannot predict the future with flawless accuracy but we can make some educated guesses.

For me that means the next few years will be spent among my continent mates directly to our South. Living in the USA at this juncture in history is an ongoing daily education. I won’t make a qualitative call on what I’m learning there.

Travel brings you home with new eyes. You see everything that was familiar and there before but differently somehow.

It is easy for me to appreciate the old song, “How you gonna keep ‘em down on the farm after they’ve seen Pa-ree?” Travel was like an addiction where the more I did it, the more I craved. I deemed it a healthy addiction and only now see the cravings diminishing somewhat.

Hours from now, I’ll be winging my way South to rejoin my husband and put this country in the rearview mirror for awhile.

When the jet place departs, I fully expect my bags to be packed and ready to go.

As ready as I’ll ever be at any rate.