Here, presented as an annual public service, are 50 personally endorsed ways
to stay warm during these wintry days - and nights:
1. Think about the presidential campaign, especially your least favorite
candidates and what outrageous things they've just said. Don't omit Bill
Clinton, who's not formally a candidate but may be the most active of the
bunch. For a really heated reaction, imagine what the Mrs. must think but
dares not say every time he starts another fight he can't win with Barack
Obama.
2. Chestnuts roasting on an open fire.
3. Fireplaces. (Get that back log just right.) Enjoy the inevitable, heated
argument over how to arrange the logs, kindling and accoutrements. My
mother-in-law once told me that there are three things every man believes he
can do better than any other man; the other two are how to drive and how to
build a fire.
4. Popcorn. Or parched peanuts. Pretend you're at a ballgame on a sultry
summer night in the spring, under the lights, complete with hot dogs. The
home team is behind 3 to 2 in the bottom of the ninth, two out and two men
on.
5. A hot bath.
6. Warm thoughts of those you love.
7. Take advantage of any snow. Shovel off the sidewalk. Build a snowman.
Maybe a whole snow family.
8. Pillow fights. (Recommended for all ages. Relieves aggression and other
symptoms of cabin fever.)
9. A mother's hug. (Good in any season.)
10. Toddies all around.
11. Eggnog.
12. Soup. Chicken soup with rice, followed by vegetable with beef. The
thicker the better. Also recommended: lentil.
13. A game of checkers. Chess only when played with a time limit; slow moves
freeze the joints.
14. A no-holds-barred, fines-go-to-those-who-land-on-No-Parking,
double-rent-on-Boardwalk-and-Park-Place, house-moving, property-stealing,
joint-monopolies-allowed, lots-of-shouting-and-muttering,
loans-from-bank-and-other-players-encouraged, some-small-thefts-permitted,
rent-dodging, all-around cut-throat game of Monopoly. All weapons checked at
the door.
15. Old movies set in tropical climes, in which the men wear pith helmets
and the women sarongs, with Bette Davis and George Brent always mopping
their brows. Start with "The Letter." Avoid "Dr. Zhivago" and "Nanook of the
North."
16. Novels that cover three or four generations. Or try Douglas Southall
Freeman's unabridged, four-volume biography of Robert E. Lee. Or Walker
Percy's essays, collected some time ago in "Sign Posts in a Strange Land."
Gibbon's "Decline and Fall" may be best of all. Wrap yourself warmly while
reading, and nod off sometime during his description of the customs and
mores of the Germanic tribes on the Roman Empire's ever shrinking borders.
His history may tend to run on, but his English is a joy.
17. Write a hot letter to the editor.
18. Save a winter weather report to read in August. It'll sound delightful.
19. Chop wood. (Particularly good for working out emotional problems, and
much cheaper than psychoanalysis.) Second choice: a punching bag.
20. Hot lemonade.
21. Exercise - indoors.
22. Chinese food, Szechwan variety. Go for the red stars on the menu.
23. Five-alarm chili. Easy on the Fritos, lettuce and cheese; heavy on the
meat, sauce and chili peppers. There are those who put the Fritos on top and
those who put 'em, inexplicably, on the bottom. And never the twain shall
meet.
24. Extra covers, preferably country quilts.
25. An electric blanket.
26. Nightcaps. Both varieties.
27. Try the sauna.
28. Rock 'n' roll.
29. Square dancing.
30. Ravel's "Bolero." To quote the composer himself, it may not be music,
but it's magnificent. If it doesn't warm your blood, report to the morgue.
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