Cold Snap Hysteria

It's currently -6 degrees outside my window, having dropped almost 30 degrees since last night.  I can't complain though -- I'm snug as a bug, and obviously very lucky in the grand scheme.  But I will complain later when I'm making the trek to my car with the sound of ridiculously dry snow crunching under my footsteps.

I don't know what the correlation is between getting older and worrying about the weather.  When I was a kid, my brother and I never stayed inside due to the weather, unless there was a tornado in our backyard.  And sometimes not even then.  Mom just shooed us out, and we gladly went, oblivious of the elements.  Do we get softer with age, or have we become an over-protective culture of coddling caregivers in general?  Probably a bit of both. 

I snapped out of my weather-worry last night when I considered stopping at the store for bread and milk with the other crazies. I realized how ridiculous that was, went straight home, bundled Steven up until he looked like the kid brother from Christmas Story, and sent him outside to shovel the front porch with a dust pan.  And he loved every minute of it. 

I will keep him in tonight, though, since we're looking at a low of -9.  But I still refuse to make a special trip for milk and bread.   

Attachment: GettingReady.jpg (126358 bytes)

Attachment: GettingReady.jpg
Published 15 January 2009 10:44 AM by Amy Unger
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Comments

# HDBRbuilder said on 15 January, 2009 01:50 PM

When I was a little kid and it got ridiculously cold (we lived way up north then), my Mom never went out for more milk and bread, etc.  She just fired up the oven and made cornbread...and got out either the cans of Pet evaporated milk (which she added water to and "doctored" the taste with a bit of Hershey's syrup) or mixed up some Carnation powdered milk.  She said that was why she kept that stuff around!  So, she would stuff us full of hot oatmeal for breakfast, then bundle us up to where we all looked like a group of multicolored Pillsbury dough boys, then send us out into the snow where we would  build and then defend our snow fort from the big kids who attacked us with snowballs from down the street.  It always seemed that about the time we ran out of our stockpile of snowballs in our defense of our snow fort, she would call call us back in for some reconstituted evaporated milk-made hot cocoa!

# williamss said on 15 January, 2009 01:56 PM

I don't blame you.  I would stay in too.

# blsamuel said on 15 January, 2009 03:34 PM

Maybe as cold as -16 where I live tonight.  Brutally cold though not as bad as the -27 about 15 to 16 years ago when we moved back north and lived in Bolingbrook IL near Chicago after living in Plano TX near Dallas for the previous 5 years.  

Ice storms when we lived in Plano were crazy.  My wife worked at a women's clothing store next to an Albertson's supermarket and the lunatics  would have shopping carts full of milk, bread, ice cream, and beer.  I'm sure not prioritzed in that order.  

The funnisest thing was the ice would normally be all gone before noon the next day.  

# seti said on 15 January, 2009 05:50 PM

Reminds me of the little brother from Cristmas Story flopping around in the snow unable to get up because of all the layers of clothes : )

# dtel said on 16 January, 2009 11:29 AM

I love your pictures Amy, natural light makes a pic look real, just perfect.

Steven is growing up fast !

# Jason said on 16 January, 2009 11:38 AM

We're freezing bubbles in Chicago.  It's pretty sweet, they hit the ground and roll around.  

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