Bracing for Blizzard Juno? Grab a shovel and some Zen.

There's a whopper of a storm coming. Bring your shovel, and your inner self. (Photo courtesy of NOAA, in public domain)

There’s a whopper of a storm coming in Blizzard Juno. Bring your shovel, and your inner self. (Photo courtesy of NOAA, in public domain)

With Winter Strom Juno bearing down on Down East, friends and family won’t lose a chance to poke fun at me over an obsession for shoveling snow, specifically the messes which accumulate in my driveway following storms.

But in taking self-effacement to the nth degree I let some other thoughts slip by. This is a chance to make up that ground.

More than a ritual to give my neighbors limitless opportunities to declare me insane, shoveling snow is a personal and therapeutic exercise, one to relish for several reasons.

The first, and probably most obvious, is exercise. Calorie burning is at a premium during vigorous shoveling. By keeping the breaks to a minimum, cardiovascular fitness can be a real benefit. Not to mention the near full-body workout achieved as a result of a prolonged job with lots of snow to move.

In favor of some ibuprofen, I’ll omit mention of the sore lower back.

Past that, though, shoveling can also be a social practice. From the neighborly perspective, as well as from total strangers, the solitary person out toiling in snow – who eschews snow blowers and plow guys – deserves some kind of salutation, if not an excuse to rest every now and then.

Neighbors coming and going are quick to wave, and sometimes even slow their cars, roll down their windows, and chat for a bit.

As much as Juno will dump, I’m not sure how many wavers, or drivers, I’ll see on the Western Prom, but be assured those who brave it will get my full attention and banter.

These conversations can range from the ridiculous to the sublime. Yes, comments and chuckles abound on the futility of my efforts, and are good natured. They’re also a reminder that I’m out there by way of fixation, and not to take my motives too seriously. We can all use a moment to look in the mirror and stick out our tongues.

Other times, though, someone will pull over their car and have a serious conversation, from the obvious weather discussion to politics, religion, family, business and the like.

It’s never escaped me that these talks – sometimes even with strangers – maintain a considerable level of gravitas despite the shovel resting between us, or the municipal plow approaching, its yellow light beckoning us to get off the street.

But the final advantage realized from shoveling is that of solitude, and a heightened sense of observation.

Even in residential urban backdrops such as Portland’s West End, the shoveler is remarkably alone. With Juno, I’m going to have to go out and clear what falls by the hour, because the precipitation won’t stop.

Waiting for the end will require a Herculean effort, regardless of others wanting to help out.

So in staying ahead of Blizzard Juno, tackling it in small bites will open up another reality. Shoveling while snow falls might seem futile, but it’s actually one of the nature’s most beautiful milieus in which to work, backbreaking task – three feet of snow –  or not.

In falling snow there is silence. What few cars pass will do so with a muffle. People go by, but you can’t hear a sound from them – no voice, no boots in the snow, nothing. Even the shovel itself barely makes a thud or a scrape as it does its work.

This is my favorite time to take a breather, and look around.

During the day the snow blurs the background so that anything of color – such as my favorite cardinal on a nearby branch – stands out in sharp contrast. At night, the effect is different but remains surreal. Flakes descending through streetlight beams look like feathers settling into a down comforter, blanketing the earth below.

Sometimes those images make me want to stop, lean in my shovel, and absorb. But reality calls for my car to be out the next day for work, and the paper and mail delivered easily. So I’ll strike at the drifts, sometimes approaching my knees.

Occasionally, I’ll wipe away a flake from my cheek, much as I would a teardrop.

Telly Halkias

About Telly Halkias

Award-winning freelance journalist from Portland's West End. Writes columns, features, and drama reviews for newspapers in Vermont, where he also owns a home, Massachusetts, New York and Maine.. Former weekend columnist at the now defunct Portland Sun. Longtime adjunct professor of college English/history/humanities. Has lived overseas for 15 years, and all over the U.S. Veteran. Small business owner. Published poet. ATCA drama critic. Loves all things outdoors, and Siberian huskies.