whether place is weather

Places have conditions. Anyone can see that any place you see can be said to be a place because it is a situation. And any situation has conditions. And everything that’s anything that ever matters anytime enough to mention it is likely someplace that has weather. And mostly every place has weather. And mostly anything is something that's conditional because it is, to some degree, it is dependent on the weather.

Things happen and don't happen all because of weather. And you can feel one way or another or some way different altogether than the way you started with because of how the weather is and how the weather changes too.

This is why it’s easy then to see how much of living is dependent on conditions, and conditional, and how much of anything of living is dependent on the weather, and how much living is dependent on the place that you are in, or at, or from, or going to – because a place is very much a thing that is something that you can be always wondering about, and wishing it was one way, and trying to adjust or not to how it is or isn’t, and because place is the space you move within, then there is always something in between you and anything that's something else, and the most important thing sometimes that can ever make you able to say anything at all is the condition of the place, which really does have much to do with weather usually – it often does.

That is why it seems so clear to me that when anybody starts to put things into places, that they are trying to create some sort of a condition, and that is all about the weather, and whether anyone can know it, can predict it, and can ever be prepared for it.

I’m pretty sure of that.