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Joe's Poetry
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Days of 1980 Minnesota winters last six months You forget white Christmas by Thanksgiving. Adults become irritable, shoveling the endless snow, driving icy roads underneath a steely ceiling that never lets sunlight through, coming inside coated with cold slush trying to stay warm on empty nights.
But for me, a playground: the gravely street slopes on a sled, frozen lakes and piles of snow, the tiny snowmen armies and their unlimited ammunition, tunneled mazes through massive drifts, They were my winter solstice.
In March, my older brothers built the king of snowmen, taking turns rolling and stacking the balls of his body. When they finished, looping paths of exposed grass ran all over the yard. I chased them, laughing and throwing snow at my little brother.
Our king stood over eight feet tall, four crystal spheres, two giant tree branch arms. My brothers wanted to get a picture of me up on his arm. It couldn't hold my weight, but they held me up there and I didn't worry about anything.
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