flemmings: (Default)
flemmings ([personal profile] flemmings) wrote2008-02-06 12:25 pm
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Miss Johnson's Sense of Snow

An advertising campaign for boots, I think, some years back had the slogan "It's been snowing in Toronto for 50 million years. Get used to it." Why am I not used to it? Or rather, why am I so suddenly not used to it?

1) Broadband. Before broadband I never knew what the weather was going to be because natch I don't watch TV or listen to the radio. So I'd wake up and go Oh, snow. What I didn't do was go to bed thinking OMG 15 cm/ 6 inches of snow by tomorrow morning with high winds and heavy drifting OMG that'll be a pain to shovel, and then it's supposed to dump another 15 cm/ 6 inches tomorrow afternoon. No, forewarned is not always a good thing.

2) Orthotics. We all know the purpose of orthotics, right? They're designed to make standing and walking **hurt**. I got orthotics last year. So now when I walk across uneven bumpy snow and worse, uneven bumpy ice in my orthoticked boots, spasms go through my feet and every step is Little Mermaid torture (Anderson, not Disney version.) I took the orthotics out of my boots the other day and walked happily to work. Alas, one wears orthotics for a reason. Without them my flat feet spasmed and every step home was a Little Mermaid form of torture. Yeah, so add Structural Screw-ups Worsening With Age to that one.

3) Arthritis. Ah well. I won almost every genetic lottery in my family (skin, hair, metabolism, features) and the ones I lost everyone else lost too (eyes and teeth) so I mustn't complain at losing one big one all to myself. It's not rheumatoid arthritis which is what my aunt had, who was the only arthritiser in her generation. So I am content even with twinging knees. They still don't make it easier to balance on bumpy sidewalks.

And the snow this year has been heavy and persistent. Great dumps of it that turn into ice over time and make getting places difficult and dangerous. This is why I regularly go out and shovel whole street's lengths when it snows, as I did last Friday and this morning. Ah, and what did I find when I went to shovel this morning? Someone else had cleared the west side of the Baptist church and the crosswalk to the supermarket. Someone else had done both corners where the plows habitually throw up Alpine ranges of frozen snow for the poor aged pedestrians to negotiate somehow. (After the December dump- long after it- I saw a girl with a walker and her mother walking in the busy street because the sidewalk corners were impassable. A kind Samaritan on that side of the street stopped traffic so they could get across.) The perennial tits on a bull corner house on the s-e side of my street was actually out shovelling her walk. I am the little leaven that leaveneth the lump, she says smugly, and have managed to guilt a whole neighbourhood into proper civic behaviour. (Well, minus the South Americans, but the South Americans still don't understand how snow works. Throwing salt on it will not make it disappear. Throwing salt on it *will* turn it into ice that's nearly impossible to remove.)

So instead I shovelled the normally impeccable Koreans' apartment house round the corner and the Vietnamese's apartment on my street, because it's the day before New Year's and no one has gone in or out of either building since the snow started falling last night.
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[identity profile] flemmings.livejournal.com 2008-02-06 07:17 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you, yes, I'll definitely look into that. I know these ones support my feet and all, but that's all they do. Nothing *strengthens* my feet, and it's the tendons that yell loudest from having to do all the work. (No one believes this. 'It's the *top* of your feet that hurt?' Yes. Not the bunions themselves, the muscles above that are pulled out of true.)

Shovelling is actually the best exercise there is for me. Whole-body, as someone else said. I stretch out before and after, sweat buckets during, and almost never experience any kind of stiffness next day. Walking OTOH... (In the 'kids, don't try this at home' department- of course at work I regularly heft 15 and 20 pound weights, so the lifting is less of a problem for me than for many.)
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[identity profile] flemmings.livejournal.com 2008-02-07 03:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh. Ah. Scar tissue. As from having feet violently yanked out of toe clips by the impact of a car sideswiping the bicycle. I certainly have scars from that, and the twinging didn't start until after the accident.

It *is* a distance. Definitely car country. Or... since I'm on the subway, it might not be that far. Half an hour from the subway is standard for my arthritis woman, bar snowstorms. Maybe after the winter's over I'll try for an appointment.
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[identity profile] flemmings.livejournal.com 2008-02-09 03:56 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah, easily over an hour if I take buses from Don Mills. Taxis might be worth it for that stretch.

Those corners... there's no doubt who's king in this town. Plow the streets for the cars as soon as the snow starts falling, block the intersections for the pedestrians and wait for God to clear the detritus. (grump)

[identity profile] flemmings.livejournal.com 2008-02-06 07:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, parenthetically, did you get those Louis L'amours from the library? I pass an enormous used bookstore on the way to work if you ever need/ want more.
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[identity profile] flemmings.livejournal.com 2008-02-07 03:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Downtown has many things not going for it, weather being one (when my sister who's only at Davisville has snow, we have freezing rain) but it does have bookstores and restaurants. A job you love is great but dear God *Richmond Hill*. No chance of *them* coming farther south, I suppose...
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[identity profile] flemmings.livejournal.com 2008-02-09 03:58 am (UTC)(link)
new boss and the rest of the department believe in real flex hours

That right there is what makes it a dream job.

[identity profile] mvrdrk.livejournal.com 2008-02-06 07:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Perhaps you should take your orthotics out to walk to work and put them back in for while you're there. Just imagining all the standing you do makes my feet hurt in sympathy.

Go you! on shoveling. Guilt is a wonderful thing.

[identity profile] flemmings.livejournal.com 2008-02-06 07:23 pm (UTC)(link)
See, I don't stand that much at work. I sit on the floor and give the guys horsie rides on my leg. Legs. I can't sit down ever without three or more kids coming up with eager smiles and bouncing up and down to show me what they want.

OTOH getting up *off* the floor is a pain. I keep thinking how much less of a pain it'd be if I lost ten kilos or so, but my body doesn't want that to happen. Thus the snow-shovelling.

[identity profile] daegaer.livejournal.com 2008-02-07 10:17 am (UTC)(link)
A more comfortable footwear might be Masai Barefoot Technology (http://www.swissmasaius.com/Default.aspx?lang=en-US) shoes. I bought a pair last year and love them (and bought a new pair in NY last month, whoo-hoo, exchange rate!) They feel weird, tight and heavy at first, then they just become the most comfortable things ever. They claim to reduce stress on joints by about 20%, to rebuild the arches, and so on. They very definitely improve the posture.

[identity profile] flemmings.livejournal.com 2008-02-07 03:41 pm (UTC)(link)
Interesting. And there's a shop that sells them right along the subway line. Must ahve a look at them.

[identity profile] feliciter.livejournal.com 2008-02-07 03:51 pm (UTC)(link)
*admires your single- and civic-mindedness with snow*

I hope you find a comfy and lasting pair of orthotic boots soon!
Alas, medical education and training in LRD is embarrassingly deficient in any area that doesn't require book larnin'/sharp objects/body fluids.