By Maryanna Gabriel
When I was travelling I used to marvel at how people
shivered and shook for what was for me an absolutely balmy experience. “I’m a Canadian,” I explained as I jumped into a pool that others just stuck their toes in and withdrew shaking their heads. Australians warned me about Tasmania. “It is so cold
there,” they said. “I’m from Canada,” was my unconcerned reply finding Tasmania
a relief from the steamy sun. Here I am at home, it being not even winter yet,
the temperatures are hovering well above zero. I can barely manage. Yes, I
know the eastern seaboard is suffering great travail, and yes, I know most of Canada is blanketed in
snow where we have none here in the coastal west, yet still here I am, my robe
clutched madly around me, with heaters going in every room and fire
roaring. Yet still my bones whisper
their icy message. I am trying to not to whinge and whimper but I can’t help
noticing that I have lost my edge and I am wondering at my nonchalance mere
weeks ago. “Oh winter. No problem. I have just had a year of summer. I can do
it.” I think I am running a fever. Every room has a box of kleenex that I shuffle desperately towards. I am
remembering meeting a woman from Kauai who looked at me
compassionately. “Your winters, it must be so very hard.” It startled me. She
felt genuinely sorry for me. I remember her now as I realize I have become one
of them. Those others. A snow bird marooned north of the 49th.This
nipping, biting, stinging of temperature creeping into one’s bones feels so very wrong. How could this happen to me?