Month | Autumn

Yet the autumn month is not without its melancholy. It is a season of letting go. The geese, in their perfect V’s, head south with a certainty that feels like a farewell. The flowers that dazzled in June are now brown stalks and dried pods. There is a stillness in the afternoons, a held breath before the first frost. To live through an autumn month is to understand that beauty and decay are not opposites, but partners.

When the autumn month ends, and the first real chill of winter rattles the panes, you will miss it. Not because it was easy—but because it was honest. It reminded you that endings can be beautiful, that shedding is sacred, and that there is a profound comfort in a cup of something warm when the world outside is turning cold. autumn month

This is also the month of harvest’s last breath. Farm stands groan with the final tomatoes, the knobby squash, and the hard, sweet apples that will keep through the cold. There is a sense of stocking up, of laying by. The scent of woodsmoke begins to curl from chimneys in the evening. Pumpkin patches appear at crossroads, and the air carries the faint, spicy whisper of cinnamon and nutmeg from open kitchen windows. Yet the autumn month is not without its melancholy