Now so firmly far from the sun, the cold air outside is a dead, permanent threat to ears and fingers. So you like to look at this old picture here. Taken in July, in the New York summer. Back when you were

just getting used to the heat. With relief you find yourself accustomed – finally – to the stifling invariance.
Before this summer, a hot crush of air meant being at your Gramps’s house, with his fuzzy blanket of a living room glowing constantly in the low 80s. Keeping his old bones moving. You get yourself a drink if you want it, son.
Or that feeling of stepping into warm air. For those like you from a temperate country, the inescapable association of being on holiday. Freedom from time and anxiety, cities and hills and waves and lakes and bodies to explore.

chirrup
And not just the heat, but this new, real noise all along 22nd street. The anvil flood of sunlight crashes down into the trees, blasting green light from their veins and awakening a riot in the branches. Cicadas. The hot afternoon chorus pouring through your window, a wash of jagged noise, ten thousand knives shaken in a cement mixer. An encompassing racket with no evident source; just foliage, glaring and innocent. Jungle drums, smoke signals, beaten shields, out of sight. It could all be in your head, but for the way the sound echoes pinballing down the street.
On cooler nights, the tide of noise recedes to a single call, one timballing insomniac. Unlike the day’s constant call, this sound is intrusive. Chirrup, chirrup. Trying to sleep. Eyes closed, you try to use the noise as a percussion; in your mind’s ear, put a tune to the regular beat. To your dismay the wee fucker is the world’s worst soloist, first round and soundly in rhythm, then early, then hanging, lingering late.
Circadian rhythm, cicadian arhythm. You wish that words were sleep.



12-Jan-09 at 7:27 pm | Permalink
OK please tell me how to say cicadas… is it kick, sick or chick? I genuinely don’t know and I never bothered to learn frenetic alphabet like in the dictionary xxx
12-Jan-09 at 10:20 pm | Permalink
CI – sih, not like a Spaniard agreeing with you, but rather like the first part of BISCUIT
CA – cah, like a posh English toff saying KHAKI
DAS – DAS, like a creepy Nazi Gestapo agent behind a hot light asking you about DAS U-BOAT
14-Jan-09 at 6:48 pm | Permalink
Thank you, and that gives me a great idea for a “Whose Line Is It Anyway” hoedown song.
Unfortunately I probs can’t shoehorn the word into conversation unless I’m talking about Animal Crossing. And the Mrs beats me when I do that.
21-Jan-09 at 1:27 pm | Permalink
There’s a generic ‘whose line is it anyway’ hoedown song start that often rattles around my brain and makes me want to run headling into a brick wall: “Well I like shopping, I really think it’s great!”
I have been pronouncing ‘cicadas’ wrong, but I do not think I ever said it out loud, so that’s okay.
It’s all okay.
Right?
21-Jan-09 at 1:28 pm | Permalink
headlong.
21-Jan-09 at 8:35 pm | Permalink
^
You think it’s funny when Ryan Stiles just slowly and amiably chants “I-don’t-know-what-to-say-next” for his hoedown and then runs headling into Richard Vranch.
23-Jan-09 at 7:07 pm | Permalink
These days it’s all about Wayne Brady making audiences howl and Laura Hall’s band of Christian moms on limp, embarassing music.
how I miss the old days, back when I had the low standards of a child.