I never thought it would happen to me

Buoyant with the notion that it was going to get cooler yesterday, I spent the late morning tackling some of the jobs I had been ‘leaving ’til after’. I heaved over water troughs and scrubbed the green out of them, refilling them with clear cold water and a little cider vinegar. I got the tractor out and cleaned the Shush Sisters’ Pigsty, scooping all the muck  and straw into the tractor bucket. I picked and chopped everyones lunch.  The animals lunch that is.  I pulled down another few bales of hay, loaded up the wheelbarrow and fed the cows under the trees.  I added a clip to my step pushing just a little harder.  Starting job after job. Around the middle of the day it became apparent that it was not cooling down at all in fact it was hotting up, and half way through a task I realised that the light was not sparkly – I was seeing stars. The shovel was not heavy – it was my chest that was heavy. The thermometer was reading 104 and I was feeling a bit unwell. The air I was dragging into my lungs was hot. Really hot.

But I was sick of it. I had had it with the heat. I had put off too many jobs for too long because of the heat and that was that.  I was going to get this finished. 

By the time I finally let myself go inside I was having trouble walking, I had stopped sweating and my head was pounding.  I felt too nauseous even to drink. I lay down in front of a fan and fell completely and immediately asleep. I never thought this would happen to me.  I do not succumb to the weather.

When John got home a few hours later he got such a fright to find me lying down in the middle of the afternoon that he poked me to see if I was alive.

I had narrowly avoided sunstroke I think. My body had started to boil. I told you that heat is a great weight loss program.  The heat sat at 104 all the rest of the day. It was another very hot day. 

Awake now, I decided to sit down for a wee while to recover and cruise some of my favourite blogs and see what was what. That is when I discovered that I have become invisible. I looked at my weeks numbers. Hundreds of my readers have dissappeared and most of the comments I had been making throughout the week on your pages were not showing.   And most of the blogs I am following are no longer showing on the reader or in my email.  Am I in your spam folder? Have I dropped off your reader?  Have you dropped off mine? Am I really here? Hullo!!  Has there been a catastrophe, should I listen to the news? What is happening? Has WordPress got sunstroke too?  Ah well. I will find you.

Good morning.  I blame my narrow excape from sunstroke on being brought up at the beach. I forget how insidious the humid heat on the prairies really is. Yes, I was wearing my wide brimmed wedding hat. Yes, I had been drinking water. No, I had not gone back inside out of the heat.  You know what they say about mad dogs and Englishmen going out in the midday sun.  Ah well.

In New Zealand, just outside of a town called Rotorua, is a secret hot pool. Rotorua is known for its geothermal activity, its hot water, mud pools and tourism. This hot pool is not commercial or fancied up, it looks like a big clear deep puddle.  It belongs to the locals. To find it you  have to drive down some side roads and under bridges, park, then walk a wee way back into the bush. It is a wide warm pool of water. Fed by two streams. One hot and one cold. I used to visit it often when I was driving  and I never once saw another person there.   I would hang my dress in a tree, leave my sandals on the bank and just walk straight into the water.  Early Autumn was the best time for this. At the far end of the pool the two streams enter very close to each other and I discovered that if you floated in the warm water close to where the streams flowed into the pool, holding onto this big rock, that an arm of cold water would curl around your body as you lay floating  in the heat.

The sensation of the cold stream moving through the hot stream, delaying its passage for just a moment as it washed over your shoulders and down to your waist and away, is so hard to describe. I have tried for years to find the right words. The water became animate in a way. If you were able to colour the streams then you would watch a transparent deep teal column of colour swirl in. Flicking its bluegreen tail like a fat eel, mixing the colours for a moment. I used to say it was a welcome chill from the embrace of a long dead lover. Someone you miss terribly and always will. Their touch makes you flinch it is so cold and so incongruous and from another world but you want to feel it just a little longer. My skin shivers at the memory.

Yesterday in the evening I felt a cool stream of air, just like this cold water. It sliced cleanly in through the heat, brushing up against my overheated body, then moving past, followed by more and then more.   The stream of cool air widened as it gathered confidence. I stood on the verandah in the dark and breathed in the blessed coolness like a starving woman.  Then  I walked around the house opening all the windows and doors and positioning the fans to suck more of this glorious bluegreen air into the house.

Today I will finish those tasks I started yesterday. You have a lovely day.  You can Leave  your Hat on, but come in out of the beating sun if it is still at your place.

Please check your spam folder and see if I am in there.  Set me free.

celi

Today.. a year ago.. the bees swarm. This was my second post ever. Not destined for the book I think. But well worth checking out if you are interested in  capturing a swarm of bees.

148 responses to “I never thought it would happen to me”

  1. I’m still here! You poor thing, sunstroke is the most hideous thing ever but that’s the danger of saying it’ll never happen to me! Add suncream to your list too, I thought the Antipodeans were great fans of it. Rest up, keep cool and hydrated. The readers will be back once America is with electricity once more. And at home too, in some cases. Poor folks them too. 🙂

      • Could be that or, I don’t think I have that many readers full stop, but I know some weeks (especially weekends) it definitely goes rather quiet. Usually when you feel you’ve post out a good piece (which then disappears into oblivion) or when you could do with some readers/commenters/feedback for the soul. Murphy’s Law that one. 😉

  2. Celi, please do be careful on these very, very hot days! Pace yourself, and do just what absolutely needs to be done outdoors when the temp is over 100. Thank heavens I have not lost you, and I’m still hearing from you every morning! xo Di

  3. So glad to hear that you are ok. It´s all very well telling you to take it easy, but I know that there are jobs that can´t be left undone. Take it easy….and slowly.

  4. I checked mine, and there you were, Celi 😦 Thank you for coming along, in any event. You are back in the comment stream where you belong.

    Hope the cool arrives to make chores a little easier.

  5. are you getting rain? i saw on the radar that you might be but i couldn’t be certain. all of the rain predicted for today totally missed us once again! and it is horribly hot..where is my cold front! i hope you are getting cooler. you and your animals need a break!

  6. That heat sounds nasty, you must look after yourself. I often don’t comment on here because you already have so many commenters I don’t want to add to your replies burden, but rest assured I enjoy all your posts immensely.

  7. My friend please be careful! As much as I admire your fantastic work ethic and love you describing your work, it sounds like you need to take breaks, drink plenty of water and try shading yourself more often – please be careful!

    Cheers
    Choc Chip Uru

  8. Cecil, be well and be careful in the heat–of coarse I should take my own advice–I too overdid it yesterday and am not feeling so swell today! I am always telling other to drink and take breaks but didn’t heed the warnings. My head has pounded most of the day….may we both feel better…
    Stacey

  9. You’re not in my spam folder but I just assumed that you hadn’t posted anything on my blogs. I’ve not been online much these past 3-4 days. Went on a fun (read adventerous) day out with Mr Misky on Friday, Saturday I woke up with a migraine, Sunday I still have a migraine. I’m hoping to be better tomorrow. I’m glad that you’re feeling better. I had heat stroke as a kid, at scout camp of all places. I was in bed from it for nearly a week.

  10. Oh C, you have to be careful. I know you have work to do, but do take care of yourself. And your numbers were only down because of the holiday. Mine were low too. Although, you’re more popular with all those lambs and dogs and such! Anyway, I only found you in my spam file once recently. Hmm, I better go get you out.

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