We had snow in te UK - the worst in 30 years, from the 1st week of December through to January. It's still snowing on and off now, but there's been a break so it's all cleared away from a couple of weeks back, and it's not settling like before. Before.. we had an entire solid month of the stuff coming down most days and just adding to what was already there, and it didn't leave the ground, and the amount caused the as-usual ill-equipped UK to run out of grit and it caused absolute, total chaos!!! We're just not used to extreme weather like that for us -- however I have seen the news and what some of you guys are having is just nothing compared to what we had!!
I sympathise, however. I couldn't get anywhere, all the transport was closed for a while, power had gone out with some homes though not for me. Every day stories were on the news relating to the difficulties snow was causing, some were trapped. There were a group of people snowed into a pub for a couple of days over New Years, due to another blizzard and extra snow (that sounds good to me though!). Things like walking to work (on the better days) was an absolute nightmare as it was so icy everyone was falling over. Cars that attempted to go out when the grit was down, ended up caught in another snow flurry, sliding everywhere. Then it cleared up, and rained, and turned to black ice! It was -11 one morning at 10am and I have NEVER seen real icicles! Guys were going around chipping some of them off as they were getting dangerously big and falling...
Now... most people just have fun. I complained, all the time about it! I don'tknow why but after the first week, it just caused me some anxiety. I live in the sticks where I have been finding it difficult to get around anyway (as it takes so long by transport) and it was just not possible, or feasible, to make a journey to see friends who are already 2 hours away by transport... so in the snow when there was transport going slowly, it would have been a nightmare. So I started to get that trapped feeling, and I think I remember at one point actually panicking and thinking 'it's never going to end' - I mean oh, how dramatic of me, but it goes to show... it does get to you! I must say I did panic when I actually got lost in the snow when the first blizzard came down so fast... in a very hilly place... where I was looking to meet friends in a pub that I didn't actually know where it was... So I thought you might appreciate some empathy on the panicky feeling...
Having said that... I did make an igloo and that was cooool!! (Well, I say igloo - I dug a hole through a mound of snow and called it my igloo...) And the 'fresh' bright white was really refreshing on my eyes for some reason. That did raise my mood in the mornings. The other good thing was how much people helped each other out. People were shovelling paths on the street, shop doorways for shopkeepers, people were helping each other up and I must say... I just don't see so much of that on a day to day basis (people aren't always falling about everywhere on a day to day basis). People in the town heard about so and so who fell over and hurt themselves, and seemed concerned. As dramatic as it sounds, it hit this area pretty badly (all of UK badly) and there was a sense of crisis, the world coming to a stop (most people couldn't go to work, no schools were open), and a community spirit?