The summer solstice comes on Friday, June 21 this year.
According to “scientists” and “officials” and “everyone else,” this is our
annual indicator of the start of summer, which, with all due respect, is
bullshit.
For about two weeks now, I’ve spent my nights super-glued to
my bed, sweat fastening my skin to the fitted sheet on the rare occasion my
fitted sheet has actually lived up to its name, or to the mattress itself for
the lion’s share of my evenings, when my fitted sheet curls up in some corner
of my bed as if recoiling from my never-ending perspiration.
On any given day, my body runs about as hot as your standard diesel engine. When the temperature skyrockets here in the Northeast, the
only places I’m capable of sleeping comfortably are a freezer chest or
someplace 80 feet below the floor of our basement. (I’m working on making that
room happen. Trust me, the sub-basement has serious Mitt Romney-type potential).
I will always take exercising in the cold as opposed to the
heat. You can always layer up to combat the cold. While most people get
starry-eyed at the prospect of living in Southern California, South Florida or
some other tropical locale, my mouth starts to dry up just thinking of living
someplace where the average temperature rests “comfortably” at 75.
So no, I’m calling shenanigans on this whole nonsense about
summer starting in late June. This isn’t an outright denouncement of the season
of bands, beaches and boozing, though; simply the small sliver of time I spend
each night pretending I care about how I perform at work the next day by
getting my 40 winks. Come summer,
that usually gets cut to somewhere between 10-15 winks. I’m typing this from my
bed right now and it’s only a matter of time before I’ll need a spatula to help
peel my skin off my laptop.
The biggest problem, really, is the lack of ways to counter
the heat. Yes, even in a first-world nation in a relatively modern home
complete with luxuries such as “electricity” and “windows,” I have proven
terrible at combating high temperatures.
I’ve tried…
Wearing less clothing:
Unfortunately, I don’t fit into my old pair of Daisy Dukes anymore, so no dice.
Opening a window:
Not effective, plus it lets in even more of the sound of the enormous freight
train that comes by our house every night right around 11:30. This train has to
be five miles long. It never ends, and it’s louder than an electrocuted herd of goats.
WHOO WHOO HERE COMES THE "FUCK YOU" TANK ENGINE RUMBLIN DOWN DA TRACKS |
Air conditioning: No, hold on a minute, I'm not done with this train. It rolls by at 2:30 AM too and I swear it tries to outdo its prior decibel production. It's the locomotive equivalent of Justin Verlander: instead of wearing down as the night goes on, it actually gets stronger as it works. If I could see the damn thing, I am positive every one of its cars would be extending me a pair of anthropomorphic middle fingers at me the whole way by, too. Jeebus, Mary and Joseph.
Anyways. Oh, the air conditioning unit. The oasis in the desert. When it works, it’s
like manna from heaven. When it works. Which, at my current place of residence,
it does not.
At my old apartment in West Chester, the centralized air
conditioning was sparsely used for a few reasons. One, my two roommates were
extraordinarily cold people, which
didn’t mesh well with my brick-oven body, so they didn’t see having the air on
as a cost-effective maneuver. (Having the heat blasting all winter, though, was
a necessity, of course)
It didn’t help my case that our air conditioning barely
worked there, either. On the rare occasion it did operate, it took five hours to
get the room to a noticeably lower temperature. The air conditioning became one
of those things we told friends we had so they’d actually come over. Every time
they’d ask if the air was really on, one of us would “check on it” by flipping a
couple switches and knobs on the thermostat aimlessly with a confused look on
our face.
Of course, the usual work-around for this is…
A fan: Nothing
beats a fan when you’re looking to blow hot air all around a room. Much like
the Catholic Church, fans don’t solve a problem, they just move it from place
to place and hope nobody notices. (I'll see you in hell, guys)
My aforementioned roommates in West Chester let me use their
desk fan in my room at night to counter the sweltering heat, which basically
only stung my skin and dried out my throat. (Yeah, I know)
There’s one option I haven’t tried: a cold shower before bed
to cool down. But what’s the fun in that when you could…
Just jump in a tub of
ice water and sleep there like a normal person without a brain condition.
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