Some easy ways to beat the summertime heat

As the temperature flutters around 100, we get a little nostalgic for December's freeze and February's snow, for hot chocolate and cold toes on linoleum. Ah, and remember spring? Daffodils and open windows and wondering whether long sleeves would keep us warm enough on morning jogs?

OK. Time to wipe away those wistful smiles (as well as the sweat beads such an effort created) and face reality: It's hot. And it's going to be this hot -- hotter, even! -- for another five months. Four if we're lucky.

Before you blow a gasket, lose steam or bubble over at the mere thought, instead put cool cucumber slices over your eyes and do this: Chill. Chill out. Take a chill pill. Or any number of trite phrases that keep running through our perspiration-mottled brains.

Keeping your cool is no easy task in summer weather. For the sake of your mental health (as well as our own), we've cooked up six ideas to get you started.

Close your eyes and count to 10

Isn't that what your mom told you to do when you get hot under the collar? We'll take her thought a step further: Open them and count to diez. Or dix. Or zehn. What a fine time this would be to learn Spanish, French, German (we're too hot to think of any more exotic ones). Or, if not to actually do homework, at least to sit in a cool classroom and listen to the rhythmic cadence of another language.

Eat something spicy

Perhaps better phrased: Don't avoid spicy foods in the summer. Yes, they'll make you sweat, but you're sweating already. When all that sweat evaporates, you're cooler.

"When you eat something spicy like a hot pepper, your blood vessels open to allow blood to flow more freely," says Lona Sandon, spokesman for the American Dietetic Association. "You might feel flushed. What it does is bring body water from surface closest to skin. You might sweat a little more. Then it evaporates off and helps the body to feel cool."

The process may sound a bit counterproductive, but Sandon's a big advocate of phytonutrients that make spicy foods spicy.

"Have at it," she says. "Just carry a towel. And have a nice glass of water or lemonade. The best way to cool your body is to make sure you have enough fluid."

Open your veins (but really your heart)

Blood needs don't stop with summer, and not just because more people outside and on the road mean more wrecks. For cancer patients, platelets (which have a shelf life of just five days) are imperative. All blood types are needed.

Call Arkansas Blood Institute at (877) 340-8777 or go to arkbi.org to set up an appointment.

Take a book around

Where does the temperature always seem sweater-over-your-shoulders comfy, the atmosphere cool and quiet? At the library, you can lose yourself in the shelves or connect with others who love reading.

Public library branches offer book clubs that meet various days and times. You can listen to what others have to say, as well as interject your own thoughts. You don't even have to whisper.

Kick around an ice-cream idea

The members of Girl Scout Troop 1678 in Plano, Texas, are out of college now. Their leader, Patty Townsend, still recalls how much fun the troop had making coffee-can ice cream.

She shared the top-secret, can't-find-anywhere-else-but-the-Internet recipe with us: Into a very clean one-pound coffee can, stir one cup each of milk and heavy cream; one-half cup sugar; and one-half teaspoon vanilla. Add fruit, nuts or chocolate, if you'd like.

Put the lid on the can and seal with duct tape. Set the can into a three-pound coffee can. Pack ice around it. Pour at least 3/4 cup rock salt on top of the ice. Seal the can.

"The girls would stand in lines about 10 feet apart," Townsend says. "They'd kick it back and forth and sing songs and giggle. It was a huge hit."

After 30 or 40 minutes, unseal the various cans. Voila! Ice cream, three cold and creamy cups of the stuff. You've already had your workout, so indulge without (much) guilt.

This can also be done with a zip-lock plastic bag. Check out this link from Howtoons.com for instructions.

Make jokes

Not only will laughter take your mind off how miserably hot you are, it's also (did you know this?) a good abs workout. With that in mind, we asked Dave Little (www.lovedavelittle.com) for a bit of heat mirth. He dabbed cool compresses on his pulse points and offered this:

"The devil calls up his travel agent and says, 'I'd like to go somewhere hot this summer.' The travel agent says, 'Have you ever been to [the South] in July?' The devil answers, 'It's a vacation, not work.'"

Style on 07/03/2018

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