Fall Months -
November is the month that teaches you to love small things. The trees are bare now, the landscape pared down to bones—gray trunks, brown fields, low clouds that hang like ceiling tiles. But the light, when it comes, is miraculous: pale gold, three o’clock in the afternoon, slanting through kitchen windows and setting the dust motes dancing. You light candles at dinner. You make soup. You pull on wool socks and notice how good the radiators sound when they first click on. November asks you to slow down, to stay in, to turn toward each other. It is the month before everything gets loud again, and it holds its quiet like a gift.
October is the month that keeps its promises. The trees ignite—maples burning crimson, oaks smoldering russet, birches scattering gold coins along the sidewalks. There is a specific Tuesday in mid-October, always a Tuesday, when you step outside and the air has turned crisp as a picked apple. Pumpkins fatten on porches. The sun sets behind football fields while the marching band practices, the sound of brass and drums carrying for miles. October is generous with its beauty, but there is a warning in it, too: Look now , it says. This won't last. fall months
By the end of November, the first real cold settles in. The last leaf falls. And somewhere in the dark, December is already waiting—but that is another story. For now, you have these months: the letting go, the blaze, the hush. Fall is not a season you keep. It is a season you pass through, and you are lucky to have passed through it at all. November is the month that teaches you to love small things
