Keeping healthy can be hazardous to your health. We recently had a rainstorm, followed by a snowstorm with several days not getting above freezing. All of this made my usual jogging route impassible—ice under snow all on top of pea-gravel is a recipe for twisted ankles or broken arms. I’ve had my fair share of spills while jogging but I’m at an age where my doctor asks me if I’ve had any falls in the past year, so I guessing it’s a bit more serious now. But getting out to jog is difficult in such conditions. A treadmill might be a solution. We used to have one and I pretty much ran it into the ground. I used it in inclement weather, but it was too much to move from New Jersey and besides, there’s nowhere in our house to put it. Our basement ceiling is so low you have to stoop, and that doesn’t work for jogging.
After a few days of feeling dumpy, and when the weather got back up into the twenties, I decided to jog on the streets. That’s one of the advantages to living in a smaller municipality. There are a few cars out at first light, but not many. And the streets are (mostly) cleared off. I wasn’t sure this was the smartest thing to do, but when I greeted another jogger out doing the same thing, I felt validated. The weather is still in charge. I’ve been interested in the way the weather affects just about everything. For example, this past summer I wanted to do a couple outdoors projects. It rained nearly every weekend and then turned so hot that people my age were warned off of outdoor activity. So much for mortal plans.
When autumn rolled around it turned cold rather quickly, forestalling any bigger projects beyond a massive amount of weeding. And this is just on a personal level. Deliveries are slowed. Sometimes transportation hubs are shut down. Bad weather for crops necessitates cooperative trading between nations (ahem). We are at the mercy of the weather. Tech giants are planning to go to Mars but they can only launch their rockets if the weather cooperates. We’ve been messing with it because of global warming, and pretty much anyone who’s non-delusional knows climate change is real. The sky is, after all, bigger than the earth. So little problems, such as having to jog in the streets, seem less of an issue. As long as it keeps us healthy.
