By now,
we’re all used to weather reports predicting heavy snowfall. This has happened
maybe five or six times this winter, and there’s probably more to come. We know
how people feel about the snow. But how do inanimate objects feel about it?
I have
several pairs of shoes and several coats. One of the coats, a nice green coat,
is perfect for normal winter weather, say, the 40s or 30s. I have a much
heavier coat, but normally, I only wear it in extremely cold weather, in the
teens or 20s.
This winter,
however, is throwing my coat routine way off balance. Instead of wearing my
extra-heavy coat two or three times, I’m wearing it more often than the other
one. As for my third jacket, the one that’s appropriate for temperatures in the
high 40s or 50s, I’m not wearing it at all.
And if this
is the case for my coats, then, what of my shoes? I have two “regular” pairs of
shoes, one pair of sneakers and one pair of heavy boots. Most of the time, I
rotate the two pairs of shoes and wear the sneakers on weekends. During normal
winters, I only wear the heavy boots maybe four or five days, when there’s a
heavy snowstorm.
But this
winter is different. This winter, I’m wearing the boots, which I think of as
being for abnormal weather, more often than the shoes.
I haven’t
even mentioned my pants. I have two pairs of heavy corduroy pants that I
usually wear two or three times for the entire winter. This winter, I find
myself wearing them a lot more than that.
It’s plain
to see that my regular shoes, jackets and pants are jealous of my heavy-duty
clothes. They’re accustomed to being worn on a regular basis. Being inside the
house most of the time, they don’t know about the constant snowstorms, and they
blame me for not wearing them enough. If I’m not careful, they’ll start a
revolt, and I’ll come home to find my clothes scattered all over the bedroom
floor.
Also in the
bedroom, there’s a small toy polar bear that we’ve had for years. Usually we
don’t pay much attention to it, except when the cat decides to play with it.
But now, the little polar bear is looking forward to the time when real polar
bears will come to New York if this weather continues, and it’s getting ready
to join them. One day, we’ll come home and the toy bear will be gone.
If you think
that’s bad, you should see what’s happening elsewhere! Over in the Museum of
Natural History, the mock-ups of the wooly mammoths behind glass have come to
life. For maybe 10,000 years, since the end of the last Ice Age, they’ve felt
out of place. Now’s their chance. The
snowstorms have awakened them, they think there’s a new Ice Age, and
they’re beginning to move about in their display cases when no one’s looking.
Soon, they believe, they’ll be roaming the Arctic tundra once again.
Clearly, the
snowstorms are disrupting people, animals, stuffed animals, coats, shoes and
everything else. It’s time to tell the weatherman, “Enough already!” Tell the
scientists to bring back global warming. Anything’s better than this!