Photography And Half-Thoughts By Mitchell Hegman

...because some of it is pretty and some of it is not.

Wednesday, December 4, 2024

Morning Report, December 4, 2024

I woke quite early this morning, wandered into the darkened sunroom, and stood amidst the houseplants there. The snake plants seemed like dusky fingers reaching up toward the sky—a sky still spattered with stars. Almost directly above me, Orion posed in his steady, invariable stance. As a child, I always sought out Orion in the night sky and felt a certain comfort in knowing he was there.

After gazing up at the stars through the curved glass for a sufficient time, I drifted to the woodstove and touched off a fire to push the chill from the house. I watched as the flames grasped and gradually dismantled the splits and ends I had stacked in the firebox last night as the sunset painted the sky using a palette of orange and red. Appropriate, I mused, that the same palette used to color sunsets is used to color fires. I thought also about Desiree, still sleeping in her castle of pillows.

It’s interesting: one of the prominent features Desiree envisioned about life in America was the presence of a fireplace or woodstove in the house—something unnecessary in island life. This morning, she will wake to find the flames I touched off painting the fire she always imagined as quintessentially American.

This Morning’s Fire

Last Night’s Sunset

—Mitchell Hegman

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