@ldfree47
Tish D Freeman
@ldfree47 · 5:00

Send a Fireman! Its hot as Hell!!

If temperatures rose to 72 75. That was hot. Well, here in Texas where I landed and for some reason, well, I'm in a nice city, so I can't complain about that. But I just feel bad for our children, our children's children, because they can't go outside and play during the day. Who wants to go outside at 110 degree weather? Nobody is called heat exhaustion. As a kid, we rode our bikes, we rode our skateboards

#Texasheat #fireman

@rocio
Rocío (Ro) Christensen
@rocio · 1:29
And now it's like as soon as there's sunlight, unless it's really early in the morning or yeah, unless it's really early in the morning, you just cannot be outside. It hits you like a train. Just the warm air, the warm breeze. It's super intense. It's really scary. And every year there's like, I don't know, so many pieces in the news about people passing out from heat strokes and even dying
@ldfree47
Tish D Freeman
@ldfree47 · 1:15

@rocio

I'm just feeling sad for the generations to come that if we don't be more responsible, that there's not going to be an Earth for them or they're going to be stuck indoors like we are now. Thank you for responding and I hope you're having fun on this. I'm trying really hard to come up with new situations and just enjoy this podcast. Thank you. Have. Good evening
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