On a winter note

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On a winter note
On a winter note

Africa-Press – Mauritius. The mild winter covers the island – sometimes with a gray coat riddled with showers, sometimes flooding the vegetation. It is a boon when homes and good people are cradled in warm rays of sunshine.

Far from being a novelty, the coolness or the cold, which has been present since last year, arouses the memory of times past when there was a real change of season: April brought a lull after a few months of sunshine.

of lead and heat, and June made it necessary to bring out flannel pajamas and woolen knitwear that mothers’ nimble fingers had made in advance. This winter season has gone into hibernation for many years, leaving the field open to the summer sun to play overtime.

This cycle has come to an end, and we are witnessing a return to normal seasons. Both take advantage of it to indulge in various tasks that the heat would not have allowed.

As long as the cold protects us from laziness, an entity that has already made its cozy nest in the minds of some, the energy that inhabits us has a wide avenue to unfold wisely.

It would almost take a John Keats to celebrate tropical “An Ode to Winter”! Let us therefore rejoice in this mild weather under the magnificent blue sky as soon as the scattered clouds slowly move away and the sun at its zenith calms its dazzling ardor.

Let’s also forget that all good things must come to an end. And that it’s too early to let an existential crisis take hold of people’s minds as the rising waters of the ocean threaten to swallow everything over time under the indifferent gaze of the firmament.

above our heads. In the meantime, everyone goes about their business. Discontent knows neither winter nor summer, surfs over the raging waters in Asia and crosses the power of fire in Europe and plunges a hundred million Americans into a heat wave.

And it is the madness that reaches the zenith above the White House that threatens to push Putin’s Russia to make the air of its neighbors unbreathable and to spread its infernal sulfur in London and Paris. The mental health of a Joe Biden appears as a metaphor for a madness of omnipotence, the one that makes people lose their minds.

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