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Photo by reza shayestehpour on Unsplash |
I no longer recall at what stage in my life I started to love the rainy days. All I know is that it’s fairly recent, as I have always associated rain with gloom when I was younger. Back then, it seems that the rain sabotages every plan and every chance I have to go out and have fun. A lot of activities gets cancelled when it rains. And there’s that thing about the gray skies that triggers internal despondency on some people. (Ever wondered why sad music videos had to be shot in the rain?)
But maybe my nouveau love for the rainy days began as I got older when overcast skies and wet grounds no longer send me to emote mode. In the later years, I wasn’t as outgoing as I was, so I’d rather spend my days cooped up at home than go out and bask under the sun’s evil (yes, evil) rays.
Apparently there’s a word for people who love the rain: Pluviophile. I don’t think I can be considered one because if I’m living in another city like Stockholm or San Francisco, I would choose a sunny day over a rainy day precisely because an average sunny day in these cities are not as bad as ours here in the Philippines. Remember how we all snickered when UK declared a heatwave when the temperature breached 25°C?
Mga mahinang nilalang.
A rainy day is a perfect time for me to relax, rest and recharge. The sound of raindrops hitting the roof is particularly soothing for me, and it makes me want to just hit the sack. What most people think is that I like going out because it is what I do every chance I get. What they don’t know is that I only do it to escape the heat gripping us at home. I’m happier when it rains; I have all the excuse to stay home.
The rain also does wonder in alleviating stress, which is the opposite for me when mercury rises. Nothing stresses me more than moving a little but sweating like a pig.
Summers had become the season I dread the most every year, not only because I incessantly moan about the heat, but it’s also the time of the year that electricity bills shoot up and I couldn’t do anything about it. AC had to be turned on for many hours in a day, as the intense heat can be very risky when we have a senior and kids at home. Electric fans can be likened to dragons spewing fire, so this is really not the time to talk about consuming electricity.
There’s this joke that you’ll just have to choose what would kill you: a heat stroke or a coronary from the exorbitant electric bill. In the past few months, our electric bill increased by 50%.
The commute during the hot, humid weather is even worse. The past few days, a 15 to 20-minute commute from our place to the mall, whether by jeepney or taxi, would make me breathe through my mouth under a face mask because the air is particularly heavy. I wasn’t exaggerating, it was that bad.
I’ve been looking forward to the first rain of May but it was dampened by the announcement of the local weather bureau that we should expect the El NiƱo phenomenon, which is a period of extreme heat and dry spells. I was hoping it’s a false alarm, but I’m beginning to think that the forecasts were right. See, May is usually the start of the rainy season and yet we barely have experienced real rain. Not even with the threat of “super typhoon” Betty last week, when we didn’t even experience heavy raining here in the Metro when it passed the area of Northern Luzon over the weekend.
There were dark clouds hanging and a series of loud thunderclaps in the late afternoons for days now but hours later, it’ll only give us light raining—not even enough to cool down the temperature. If for anything, it made nights a swelter.
Last week, several local news outlets had announced that PAGASA already declared that the rainy season is already here. Then again, they were also quick to say that they are still expecting lower-than-normal rainfall.