Observations placeholder
Mistral and madness
Identifier
003279
Type of Spiritual Experience
Background
A description of the experience
From Mistral – Provence, France - By Kamiah A. Walker | April 15th, 2002
I can’t laugh when the Mistral blows because it is so sharp and twisting that I think it will steal my laugh and my breath. I walk down rue de la Paix with my collar turned up and my scarf wrapped tight, and I wonder at the story the Mistral is trying to tell. It’s trying so hard, straining to be understood but it speaks a different language than I do. It screams of discontent and longing, of fear and irrationality.
The Mistral can be used as a line of defense in a murder trial – the Mistral blew right through me, icing my heart and forcing me to kill. The Mistral whispers of change, but it’s not an innocent whisper in a quiet library. The Mistral is a whisper of a death-bringing secret. It throws all the leaves off the cypress trees and pulls bad omens behind it.
It feels like that to me, at least. I came to Aix-en-Provence expecting Monet days – impossible colors wrapped in a warm haze. The Mistral cut through my Monet like a sharp slap of Cocteau. ……….. The first time the Mistral blew, I felt like France had betrayed me. I lay in bed the first night, empty and wishing for Iowa, and from outside I heard France being torn apart. Maybe it just sounded like that to me; maybe I wanted to hear in the wind what my own heart felt like – scattered. That first night, the Mistral and I did speak the same language of loss, but it couldn’t comfort me. It cried for centuries of loss, far more plaintive than my cry for America, familiar smiles, and the smell of my house. I had come to France, an unknown going to another unknown, and that first night the unknown hid my cries in the Mistral.
……..The Mistral can blow for days, tiresome headache days. It rattles the Provençal tiled roofs at 100 mph sometimes, filling the hours with a clatter chatter that denies solitude. …..
Walking down rue de la Paix, a winding street made smaller by parked mopeds, I feel trapped in the Mistral’s insistence, pushed along by its will. Again I wonder at the bad omens it seems to bring, but I know that’s a child’s imaginings, wanting to find magic and unusual in even the unseen – especially in the unseen.
Provence needs the Mistral or it ceases to be the Provence of my dreams. I need the Mistral to cut through those dreams to truth – beauty comes after the wind.