I've been in Boston for more than 25 years - it seems completely normal to
me. But yes -
a) Layers.
b) Pay attention to the weather forecasts for temperature. Predictions of
precipitation are often wrong but wind chill predictions are subjectively
accurate :-).
c) If you're going to drive a car - you might want to stay off the road
until you're used to driving on ice. Boston is very good at clearing roads
but a few years ago in a blizzard I was driving (taking someone to the
emergency room) but I'm an experienced driver in the snow... and I still
spun out. Luckily no one else was on the road and nothing was hit.
d) Try to get your apartment to be near your classes :-).
e) Complain about the weather - this raises your core temperature.

I really don't think it's bad at all but it's probably Stockholm Syndrome.


On Tue, Mar 28, 2017 at 4:25 PM, Thaths <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Tue, Mar 28, 2017 at 10:10 PM Chew Lin Kay <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> /delurks
>
> And excepting that, anyone has tips to help a tropical baby
> survive her first winter? (how is it snowing in March?!)
>
>
> The cold is just one part of the misery. The other is the dearth of
> daylight.
>
> I strongly recommend you get a couple of these Happy Lights:
>
> https://www.amazon.com/Verilux-HappyLight-Energy-Lamp-5000/dp/B002Q2H2JC
>
> Thaths
>

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