Will it snow? If my wife tells me so!

headache

It was Sunday, January 9, 2011.  Most people in the Tennessee Valley were either hunkered down with their weather radios, watching the TV weather forecasts, or in line at the supermarket.  (When there’s snow in the local forecast, and we see cars in Boston buried under five feet, our instincts tell us to hoard enough bread and soup to last until Labor Day.)

For whatever reason, my joints and sinuses seem to be immune to atmospheric changes.  Either that, or I’m just numb.  But my dear wife Cindy can detect a storm forming in the clouds over Chicago.  I always turn to her when there are rumors of severe weather approaching.  “Cindy,” I said on that quiet Sunday.  “How are you feeling, with your personal weather radar?”  “My head is killing me,” she replied.  I needed more information to decide whether to pack an overnight bag for work.  “Where, exactly?” I asked.   She pointed to her forehead.  “It’s above my right eye.”  I’d never heard that one before.  “And it’s really hurting,” she added.  “What do you think it means?” I asked. (When rain is on the way, she has a mere sinus headache.  This was different.)  “Something big is coming,” she said.

The next day, Monday, January 10, 2011, local residents awoke to ten inches of snow.  The evening before, I had posted Cindy’s prognostication on Facebook.  It turns out she wasn’t the only one.  “My knees are hurting,” one woman wrote.  “My wife’s right hip joint is aching really bad,” said one man.  Another woman wrote, “The vein on my husband’s right temple is puffing up, and his headache is so bad, he’s going to bed!” Others complained about their knees, ankles, shoulders and back acting up like never before.  One of my friends wrote, “My left knee and ankle have been screaming snow since Friday afternoon!” While Cindy’s built-in weather station was sending out alerts above her right eye, others felt the pressure over their left eye, and one man even felt it above both eyes.

“My husband says his knees haven’t hurt so badly since he was a kid. My feet, ankles and left wrist (the one I broke in 2nd grade) have been hurting all day,” wrote one woman. “I’ve had a migraine for 24 hours,” wrote another.  And, “The metal plate in my neck hurts, so I’m stocking up now!” Others even talked about pain in their teeth, and changes in their hair.  One woman wrote, “I know something is coming, I suddenly have a strong urge to clean the house.”  One of my male friends wrote, “I don’t need a weather forecast.  Whenever snow or ice is on the way, I get an uncontrollable urge to go to Waffle House.  I think they send out some kind of secret signal.”

If my human friends didn’t feel the symptoms, their pets did.  “I have a dog whose droopy little ears perk up when something is coming,” wrote one of my friends.  Another wrote, “I have four nervous cats.  They get like this every time.” Some folks reported on blackbirds swarming, cows huddling together, and squirrels stocking their pantries, so all the signs were there.  Not to mention the distant sound of a train you don’t seem to hear any other time of the year.

So while the various forecasters and “models” from Europe, Canada and the United States have differing opinions on how much freezing precipitation we’ll get and when it will arrive, Cindy just points to the big toe on her right foot.”I had surgery on that one. It’s been stiffening up all afternoon.  That only happens when there’s a serious change on the way.  Add that to the sinus pressure across my forehead and under my cheekbones.  Something’s coming.”

I’m thankful for the Doppler, the Storm Tracker, and all my TV weather friends.  But when I’m too lazy to grab the remote, and my phone isn’t charged, I just turn to my personal weather forecaster.  She was formerly known as Cindy, but I have now re-named her the Tennessee Valley’s Official Pinpoint Weather Wife 3000.

What’s that, Weather Wife?  Now it’s in your knees?  Yikes, maybe I’d better start packing.

About David Carroll

David Carroll is a longtime Chattanooga radio and TV broadcaster, and has anchored the evening news on WRCB-TV since 1987. He is the author of "Chattanooga Radio & Television" published by Arcadia.

7 thoughts on “Will it snow? If my wife tells me so!

  1. Susan Kite

    Loved the article!
    Wished I had listened to my inner warning system when my husband decided it was okay to go to his doctor’s appt. in Knoxville. By this morning everyone was saying nothing until this afternoon. I am home safe now, but let me tell you, my hands are still curled as thought around that steering wheel. The ice is still coating my poor little Corolla, too. We were both traumatized. Never again!!

    Reply
  2. Jerry LIngerfelt

    Yeah here in sunny FL my joints told me to get out and play golf today. The temp will be in the mid to high 70’s. It was and I did play golf. Had a good round for a change. But my sinuses and my joints tell me it’s going to rain here tomorrow (Wed) and strangely enough, the Weather Channel on my I-phone agrees. We’ll see. Stay warm my Chattanooga friends and family.

    Reply
  3. Rhonda Thomas

    I just read your article about your “weather wife”. I just looked up “weather related sinus problems” today. Sunday, I took a nap with a clear head, woke up with a stopped up head, runny nose, lightheadedness. I just KNEW that something was coming our way, no matter what the weather people said. I sure wish this weather would clear up, because I still have it. I really was agreeing with everything your wife was saying.

    Reply
  4. Dana

    Love that article – what a talented wife! I love snow and hope we get a bunch in 2018 – I am retired and do not have to battle the traffic.

    Reply

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