Some Heatwave Battling Tips

By Jim Hagarty

I have a few helpful suggestions for coping with the extreme heat we have been experiencing this week.

First of all, fill your freezer full of popsicles. Secondly, do not tell your children you have filled your freezer full of popsicles. When they discover that you have filled your freezer full of popsicles, and tell you they prefer those big, long “freezies” to popsicles, do not, as they sit there sucking the frozen particles out of plastic tubes while gripping the tubes with towels so as not to freeze their fingers, tell them about the advantages of popsicles. About how they taste so much better, for starters. About how you can break them in half and leave one half in the freezer while you eat the other, thereby avoiding the freezie meltdown effect whereby the last half of it is just juice by the time you get to it. And about how no towels are needed because you get to hold onto a nice warm, dry stick while you cool your innards.

Having now forever turned them onto popsicles, do not teach your children how to figure out what flavour of popsicle is contained within those non-clear wrappers. How, if you hold them up to the light, you can learn to distinguish the orange from the cherry and the grape. Don’t, whatever you do, tell them the orange is the best flavour. Do not do these things unless you are prepared to arm-wrestle your children for your share of the eight orange popsicles that come in every box of 24.

Even more importantly, lick your popsicles, do not chew them. Especially, do not chew four orange popsicles in a row. If you do, washing your mouth out several times with warm water to try to reduce the excruciating pain in your teeth will not work. It will take two pain-killer tablets to ease the discomfort.

Transporting your body from one locale to another in numbing heat is also made easier if you do not commit this fatal error: Do not buy a new car in December!

“Would you like air conditioning?” the salesman will ask, as he and you stand in a drifted-in car lot being blown off your feet by a blinding snowstorm in 20-below weather.

“Air conditioning?” you will laugh, almost haughtily. “Yeah, right. I don’t think so.” Who needs air conditioning in a new car when the fingers you are using to put the keys in the lock are about to break off from frostbite?

No, whatever you do, make sure you buy your new car during the height of the tropical season when you might be inclined to not only ask for air conditioning, but to demand it. Maybe even two air conditioners in case one of them breaks down. Otherwise, you will have to get used to cooling off while driving using the primitive method your ancestors used: rolling down all the windows in your car. This works not too badly except that you can’t hear the radio with your eardrums being battered by the winds created by your open windows.

There is also the problem of trying to keep everything battened down, as items are apt to whirl around the inside of your vehicle as if caught in a tornado before they fly out of the car and leave your possession forever.

If you buy one of those little personal battery-powered fans you can hold up to your face, take care not to hold it too close to your nose as these little suckers mean business (see two pain killer pills, above). People with hair also report emerging after such a journey looking like Curly from the Three Stooges.

If you are male, at least you have the blessed option of being able to waltz around your yard topless, though whether the neighbours might consider that a blessing is an open question. If you are female and you try that, you might soon be sharing your yard with a host of voyeurs.

If all else fails, go buy yourself one of the newest things on the market: an outdoor patio fan. No longer need you swelter by the pool uncooled. (Oh yes, I forgot: Install a pool.) Now you can create your very own wind.

Still, the very best body-cooling device is your shower. Keep gradually turning that temperature dial to cold, but make sure you stop just before you faint.

Author: Jim Hagarty

I am a 72-year-old retired journalist, busy recovering from a lifelong career as an unretired journalist. This year marks a half century of my scratching out little fables about life. My interests include genealogy, humour and music. I live in a little blue shack in Canada and spend most of my time trying to stay out of trouble. I am not that good at it. I also spent years teaching journalism. Poor state of journalism today: My fault. I have a family I don't deserve, a dog that adores me, and two cars the junk yard refuses to accept. My prized possessions include my old guitar and a razor my Dad gave me when I was 14 and which I still use when I bother to shave. Oh, and my great-great-grandfather's blackthorn stick he brought from Ireland in the 1850s. I have only one opinion but it is a good one: People take too many showers.