John Darling: Autumn, when you know what’s possible

Lithia Park fall color photo posted by John Darling on his Facebook page on Oct. 20, 2020.
October 6, 2022

Sit still for a long time and you can feel fall falling

By John Darling

If you go out in a big field in the middle of October and sit still for a long time, long enough that all your thought slows down and your awareness becomes a still pool, still enough to reflect the sky and the living things around you. You can feel fall falling.

John Darling teaching high school in 1967.

There are only two seasons, really, summer and winter. The other two are journeys in between. And like all journeys, they heighten awareness and call on us to spend that which has fulfilled us in our labors at home.

The benign air of summer has gone south toward the equator. The northern reaches of the earth tilt away from the sun. It is not as bright. Its shadows are not as sharp.

The stars shine more fiercely at night and glitter more as polar winds reach down to stir up the high-altitude air. The bird songs are different as strange species rest on their way south.

The life drains away from the weeds of the field, leaving crisped and sere forms, as detailed and infinite in variety as an etching. And, of course, the leaves grow richest as they near death.

Everything is leaving; only we are stationary. And the message is clear: there will not be time or warmth enough to do what you will in the hills and forests and streams. Nature is again impressing on us the dazzling speed with which she can take a year. She requires us to respond to her once more after a summer of easy fraternization with her. We are gone from the hammock and raise our collar to the wind.

This is the season we feel most alive, but a different kind of life than spring, with its chaos of so many things around and within, coming to life at once, with its infinitude of possibilities.

Fall has no illusions. Three-fourths of the way through the year, like three-fourths of the way through life, you know what is possible. The survivors of spring’s promises have braided themselves into their theme for the year. You see it clearly. Your juices are flowing in concert and, without having to ask why, you embrace it.

In this valley, the first autumn came a few weeks ago, when the leaft trees began to turn. Now it is the second autumn, when the oaks perform their slow magic. Many of you will get in your cars to see this. You can go for a drive in October, but you can’t go for a drive in autumn.

This essay by John E. Darling aired Oct. 24, 1972, on KOBI-TV, Medford. Darling lived in Ashland from 1971 until he died at age 77 in January 2021. A US Marine Corps journalist, he went on to write for the Oregonian, Mail Tribune, Daily Tidings, and United Press International, among others, along with stints as a news anchor at KOBI, executive assistant to the Oregon Senate President and press secretary of campaigns for Oregon governor and U.S. Senate. Ashland.news is, with permission, publishing monthly excerpts from his collection “The Divine Addiction: Essays Out of Oregon.”

Picture of Bert Etling

Bert Etling

Bert Etling is the executive editor of Ashland.news. Email him at betling@ashland.news.

Related Posts...

John Darling: The mystery of the journeyless journey

John Darling: The labyrinth affirms this right off by taking you straightaway nearly to the center, the goal, then diverts you away to these winding, Byzantine switchbacks to nowhere, which serve the purpose of frustrating the mind and ego and all its sense of right-wrong, good-bad, success-failure — and it’s oh-so-dear need for control.

Read More »

Our Sponsors

Latest posts

Test

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Nunc lobortis enim non odio vulputate, sit amet dapibus ligula dictum. Proin consectetur fringilla dapibus. Pellentesque et dolor iaculis, ullamcorper turpis faucibus,

Read More >

Ask Strider: Advice for big brothers

Ask Strider: A worried older brother asks our advice columnist’s advice. And a dog’s guardian wants to know if there is any hope getting their hat-hating dog to calm down. As always, Strider tries to give words that help!

Read More >

Our Sponsors

Ashland.news Classifieds Ashland Talent Phoenix Medford Oregon
Ashland Climate Collaborative Sreets for Everyone Ashland Oregon
City of Ashland Public Notice Ashland Oregon

Explore More...

This week's theme: bicycle shops, services and routes. Solve it in your browser or download and print. Next Friday's Crossword: OSF's Secret Season #03
This week's theme: four hidden tribes who had to leave our area, in recognition of Indigenous Peoples' Day. Solve it in your browser or download and print. Next Friday's crossword: Enjoy the Ride #03
This week's theme shakes things up for International Shakeout Day, Oct. 16th. Solve it in your browser or download and print. Next Friday's crossword: First Settlers #02
After a successful production of  “The Vagina Monologues” and raising more than $2,000 for Planned Parenthood of Southwestern Oregon, Ashland actor and director Lia Dugal intends for “The Climate Monologues” to premiere in Oregon in late 2025 or early 2026 at the Bellview Grange in Ashland.

Don't Miss Our Top Stories

Get our newsletter delivered to your inbox three times a week.
It’s FREE and you can cancel anytime.

ashland.news logo

Subscribe to the newsletter and get local news sent directly to your inbox.

(It’s free)