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changes; they re-realize that passage of time occurs and that this day will soon end. They despair.
rest of the day but I'd just as soon forgo the experience. We'd sought the solace of the neighborhood park. We were outside for the sheer joy of it but also to head off any onslaught of grouchiness. It was working.
particularly shapely cumulus mediocris (as wide as it is tall) that looked like a fat skull when viewed one way or flowers another. He preferred the skull. Then he just stood and stared his index finger half-pointing but forgotten. The gaze and slackened jaw looked more awed than stupid now. An easygoing breeze chased itself in gentle gusts around the trees as birds skimmed the branch tips and he stared at clouds as solid-looking as mountains as tall too but mutable and morphing like the globs in a lava lamp. A knobby marbly bit of cloud poked from the rest of the mass and was edged with brilliant while light reminding me of a kid I'd seen once peeking out of the curtains before a school talent show. David absent-mindedly made a "poof" motion with his hand like you would do to flick water. His fingers stayed open.
obsessed with clouds. He began at age ten to keep a weather journal. By fifteen he recorded the weather conditions twice a day using a thermometer weather vane rain gauge and barometer. I'm not even sure I remember exactly what a barometer does.
of course.
to give clouds their own names and character rather than writing them off as gods in the sky and calling it a day. He chose Latin words modeling his system after Linnaeus. (Fortunately -- or perhaps unfortunately if you're my husband or son -- he chose carefully and we aren't obliged to point out well formed billowy labiaor a particularly shapely phallusformation.)
A week later I can't believe I ever had a hard time telling stratus from cirrus. I can't believe I went first to a book for the answer instead of the sky.
"heaped"). This is the reason I never really got Wordsworth's "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud" which is otherwise a lovely meditation. I got stuck at "cloud" and pictured one of these. Never mind the daffodils -- what I wondered could be lonely about a robust lively conglomerated force like this? I'd love to be a droplet in a cumulus. I'd never ever be lonely. Cumulus are the "cloud-shaped" clouds and their basic cloud outline was pretty much the staple (and limit) of my artistic endeavors in school.


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