Showing posts with label Summertime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Summertime. Show all posts

Thursday, June 19, 2008

When You're Hot, You're Hot

It's summer folks. Now, I'm not complaining. It's just hot, that's all. Our skies have been a beautiful blue with an occasional cloud to temporarily make the oven like effects of the sun seem bareable. I was born and raised in the South; south Mississippi, Puerto Rico, south Florida, south Alabama, and all of these places were hot and humid. I lived my entire life in these climes. We did venture north to Oklahoma City for a year and did four years in Fort Smith, Arkansas, but for the most part it was always hot in the summer. As you can see from the little inset map in the upper left hand corner, I'm about as far south as one can go and still be in the United States. I should not expect anything but hot. As a kid, I never seemed to notice hot. I could play at full steam all day and never complain. I think it was the beginning of high school football practice in south Florida when I first realized how hot one could get. Two-a-day practice sessions in full uniform at the end of August made me think that death was a real possibility. As an young adult, I got this same feeling working on a siesmograph crew in south Mississippi, and later an oil field service crew when I was in my mid thirties. But, I survived and after a few hours rest and a good meal, I was ready to go again.


Yesterday, the actual temperature was so close to 100 degrees it didn't pay to argue either way. The heat index, which factors in the humidity, was 105. I fired my yard crew two weeks ago, so I have been doing my own mowing for about two weeks now. In fact, for most of my life I did yard work for myself and others with no ill effects. I was in pretty fair physical shape during my career, but after retirement I put on a few extra pounds. I was living in Austin, Texas several years ago (when I was in my late fifties) and I decided to go and do my yard work one summer morning when the summer temps were mid 90's early. I finished my yard at about noon, and since my neighbor was on vacation, I decided to do his too. I got about halfway through and noticed I was having trouble keeping up with my self propelled push mower, and I just couldn't get a good breath (I thought I was back in two-a-day practices). I stopped and cooled down, the actual temperature was 106 degrees. I finished the job by doing repeated cooling down sessions, but I decided to go and get my heart checked out. The resultant stress test showed that my heart was in great shape. The doctor found out what had caused my concern and told me that fat boys my age should not do yard work in such extreme heat. Now that I'm over sixty, I am reduced to doing a couple of hours at a time in my bathing suit and then going directly to the pool for a nice thirty minute cool down before retiring to the air conditioned safe zone. I will fire up the old Toro as soon as the dew dries this morning and try to finish before the mower housing melts.



Laughter and tears are both responses to frustration and exhaustion. I myself prefer to laugh, since there is less cleaning up to do afterward. -
Kurt Vonnegut

Monday, June 2, 2008

Summer Time/Easy Living

Summer time and the livin' is easy.... I was lying on a miracle, vinyl covered foam mat in my pool this afternoon at about 5:00 PM, and as I looked at the clouds through my polarized sun glasses I thought how true that line from the old song was. I say miracle mat because it held up my considerable girth with no problem at all. The sun was still hot at five in the afternoon and I watched the cotton ball clouds change shapes as they put on a morph show for me. Is this a great country or what? I knew many of you were worrying with how to comment on political banter without offending the author, or commenter who might drop by with an opposing view. Well, now you know what I was doing - lying in the pool looking at the clouds. I enjoy all your comments pro or con. If I didn't, I wouldn't post it for comment in the first place. So, if I should wax political at some time in the future before the election - fire away. You might even change my mind if your argument is sound. So, anyway as the gulf breeze turned my mat into the sun, I closed my eyelids and looked at the crimson curtain with its kaleidoscope of changing shapes and thought how many people will never know this kind of peace and prosperity. I am truly thankful for being a citizen of the United States of America. Several years ago I had a house with the master bath on the east wall. The frosted glass bricks above the tub were lined up with the door into the master bedroom. In the summer, the morning sun would shine through the glass and light my bedroom. I wrote this poem about waking up to the rising sun.

Sunrise

Epiphany?

No, just the rising sun
blasting through the frosted
glass on the east wall.

A laser.

Eyes closed,
I can feel it.

No fast moves.

Aroma of dark elixir.

Quiet electric hum
inside insulated walls.

A favorite time
that does not last.


The true value of a human being is determined primarily by the measure and the sense in which he has attained to liberation from the self. Albert Einstien