by
John David Powell
“Hot enuf fer ya?”
We can all die happy if we never hear that phrase
again. I know I will, because, yes, it is hot enough for me. It is so hot
that one of the air conditioners here at the ranch said “no mas” and gave
up the ghost.
Its untimely death provide a small amount of
amusement, though. My delicate tropical of a daughter left for work thirty
minutes early because the upstairs was just too hot for any human to have
to endure. In fact, going to work early was far more acceptable than
spending another thirty minutes in our temporary sauna.
I do not know about where you live, but it is
real hot here in Texas. And, just how hot is it? It is so hot, the media
and folks you stick to on the street are having a hard time coming up with
enough adjectives to describe it.
A heat index of more than 100 degrees for days on
end not only drains the body and spirit, but it also takes its toll on the
thesaurus. There is a limit to the number of ways to describe the heat and
still sound relatively intelligent. The TV folks crossed that line at 2:17
p.m. last Thursday.
Of course, intelligence (or the lack thereof) is
not to blame for their lame attempts at describing the heat. Blame it on
global warming. I tried to blame it on illegal immigrants, but that’s a
hot topic all by itself.
We can divide hot weather descriptions into
several categories.
Old Standbys: Sweltering. Record-setting.
Record-breaking.
Wild Kingdom: Ferocious. Savage. Tropical. Hot
enough to fry a lizard.
The Gym: Sauna-like. Steamy. Exhausting.
Blistering.
Really Scary Movies: Horrible. Fiendish. Ghastly.
Ghastly, though, might be taking it a bit too
far. You step outside to get the morning paper. You stumble inside looking
like you have survived an attack by renegade fire fighters. Your wife
looks at you and asks what it's like out there. “Ghastly,” you say. She
says, “You've been watching too many James Mason movies.”
Then there's that whole S & M scene. Cruel.
Brutish. Punishing. Merciless and her evil twin Unmerciful.
How about the Hades motif? Hot as hell. Diabolic.
Infernal inferno. Blazing.
No? Want something a bit more domestic? How about
the Kitchen? Searing. Wilting. Baking. Broiling. Withering. Steaming.
Draining. Hot enough to fry a lizard (see Wild Kingdom). Hot enough to fry
an egg.
And speaking of frying an egg. No death is too
good for the next reporter who goes out to do a story showing that “It was
so hot today you could fry an egg on (the sidewalk, the street, the car
hood, the lamp post, the swing, the slide, the kids on the swing and
slide, the forehead of this homeless person who looks like, yes, it is,
Eldred, our former anchor).”
Don't forget the whole Hottern category. Hottern
a firecracker. Hottern a pistol. Hottern a two-dollar pistol. Hottern hell
(see Hades).
Combining hottern with Good-Old-Boy you get
hottern a (name your high school rival) cheerleader on homecoming, and
hottern a (name your high school rival) homecoming queen. Of course, the
closest these guys ever got to a cheerleader or a homecoming queen was
Playboy's Girls of the Southwest Conference.
Oh, I forgot. Hottern a match head and hottern a
pepper sprout, members of the Weather Lyrics category.
Remember your brain and your brain on drugs?
Well, you also have brain-numbing, brain-boiling, and brain-baking (sounds
suspiciously like a combo with Kitchen). And for those wanting a bit more
hyperbole: Mind destroying.
There's also the “you're at home all day for
several days with the kids who are out of school and bored” category:
Unrelenting.
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John David Powell is a six-time winner of the Houston Press Club’s
Lone Star Award for Internet Opinion Writing, a communication
professional, and a contributor to the Christian History Project. His
email address is
johndavidpowell@yahoo.com
The opinions expressed in
this column represent those of the author and do not necessarily reflect
the opinions, views, or philosophy of TheRealityCheck.org