VENDLER.

Winter dream

2025.01.15.

The beginning of January is traditionally the time for planning the year in my private life. I sit down with a notebook and carefully structure my thoughts, gathering everything I want to focus on during the year so I can revisit these goals every couple of weeks or months to see what progress I’ve made.

This year, however, nothing comes.

Or rather, what does come is entirely different from what I’m used to writing. Somehow, this year still feels foggy, like the city in the mornings when viewed from the mountain. For the past two weeks, almost every morning, a thick layer of fog has blanketed the streets. During my walks, the top of the hill has sometimes peeked out from the mist, sometimes not. It was so beautiful how the fog concealed the bustling morning city—the rush of people heading to work and children going to school. Even though I couldn’t see them, I knew they were there.

And that’s how I feel about my year.

I can’t see things clearly yet; everything feels foggy and quiet. Perhaps my life is following the cycles of nature. Maybe it’s still winter, and my thoughts are frozen, everything within me asleep. Perhaps the creative energies inside me are quietly hibernating in a safe, peaceful place because they know it’s not time to emerge yet—not until the weather turns friendlier.

Of course, it’s also possible that they’re already at work inside me. That’s what I feel, that’s what compels me to sit down again and again to plan my year. They’re doing their job, but the January fog obscures everything within me, too. I can’t see or hear them because I’m still somewhere else. Still on the mountain, still walking there. And while it’s wonderful to be high up, it means you’re not among the others. I don’t see them, I’m not moving with the crowd.

I wait.

I think that’s my task now—to wait a little longer. With patience, with peace. As I sit in front of my computer, I believe this will be a good year. Despite all the uncertainties, I believe this year will bring something important into my life. It doesn’t matter what will happen, it doesn’t matter how the events around me may stir my emotions repeatedly. Something is coming—a change—that will be good.

Will it?

I don’t know. I leave room for the possibility that it won’t. I don’t know what will happen. But that’s okay. It’s enough to believe in this, to understand that good things are not easy, not comfortable, not always safe, and not controllable. They are simply good. And it’s enough for me if I can see the good in the difficult, the uncomfortable, the uncertain, and the uncontrollable, if I can go with it and build on it.

And perhaps that part is up to me.

It depends on the perspective from which I view my life and the events in it. Maybe it’s this belief that takes me to the mountain every morning. Maybe it’s the strength within this belief that makes me calm and patient. To realize that I don’t need to do anything right now. We don’t sow in winter. Fruits don’t ripen in winter… but we’ve forgotten this because we think we can have everything, anytime, immediately, as long as we want to buy it.

So I let go of all this now, and I simply enjoy the snowy nothingness, the cold purity, and in quiet serenity, I wait for the dream to arrive.

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The article was translated from Hungarian to English by ChatGPT. Thank you, ChatGPT, for being here.

2025. BALAZS VENDLER

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