Friday, July 17, 2026

Heat Exhaustion and Heat Stroke – The Big Two (And How to Stay Out of the ER)

Alright, friends. We’ve talked about the small stuff: wobbly standing, cranky muscles, puffy ankles, itchy rashes, and sunburns that make you look like a tomato. Now we need to talk about the two villains that actually deserve your fear. Not panic, fear is useful. Panic is not.

Heat exhaustion and heat stroke are the heavy hitters of the Dog Days. One is a serious warning. The other is a life-threatening emergency. Knowing the difference, and what to do about each, could save your life or your neighbor’s.

Heat Exhaustion (The Warning Shot)

Heat exhaustion is your body screaming, “I am NOT okay!” It’s the stage right before things get really bad. The symptoms are hard to ignore, but we’re stubborn creatures, aren’t we? We tell ourselves, “I just need to finish this one thing.” Don’t.

Signs of heat exhaustion:

  • Heavy sweating (but the skin may feel cool and clammy)
  • Weakness or fatigue that feels extreme
  • Dizziness or feeling like you might faint
  • Nausea or an upset stomach
  • Headache that won’t quit
  • Fast, weak pulse
  • Muscle cramps (hello, old friend)
  • Dark urine (you’re dehydrated)

What to do immediately (and I mean immediately):

  1. Get out of the heat. Go inside. Find air conditioning. If you can’t get inside, find deep shade, under a tree or a covered porch.
  2. Lie down and put your feet up slightly.
  3. Drink cool water or a sports drink. Sip, don’t chug. Chugging can upset your stomach more.
  4. Apply cool cloths to your neck, armpits, and groin. That’s where large blood vessels live, so cooling those spots cools your whole body faster.
  5. Take off any extra clothing (do this in private or don’t, I’m not here to judge).

Here’s the crucial part: You should start feeling better within 30 minutes. If you don’t, or if you start vomiting, call your doctor or go to urgent care. Heat exhaustion that doesn’t resolve can slip into heat stroke, and that’s where we stop messing around.

Heat Stroke (The 911 Emergency)

Heat stroke is not a joke. It is not a “tough it out” situation. It is your body’s cooling system failing completely. You stop sweating. Your internal temperature climbs above 103°F or 104°F. And your brain starts to get cooked, literally.

Signs of heat stroke:

  • Hot, dry, red skin (no sweating, even though you’re burning up)
  • Confusion, slurred speech, or agitation (person seems drunk or not making sense)
  • Throbbing headache that’s worse than any migraine
  • Loss of consciousness (passing out and not waking up quickly)
  • Rapid, strong pulse (feels like your heart is trying to escape)
  • Seizures (this is very, very bad)

What to do if you suspect heat stroke (in yourself or someone else):

  1. Call 911 immediately. Do not wait. Do not “see if it gets better.” Do not drive yourself to the hospital unless there is literally no other option. Call an ambulance.
  2. Move the person to a cooler place while waiting.
  3. Cool them by any means possible. Ice packs on the neck, armpits, and groin. Cool water sprayed on the skin with fans blowing. If they’re alert enough to drink, give cool water, but if they’re confused or unconscious, do NOT give anything by mouth, they could choke.
  4. Do not give fever medication like Tylenol or ibuprofen. This isn’t a fever; it’s environmental overheating. Those pills won’t work and can hurt the kidneys.

The best news? Heat stroke is almost entirely preventable. And prevention looks exactly like everything we’ve talked about all week:

  • Hydrate before, during, and after being outside.
  • Take breaks in the shade or air conditioning every 20-30 minutes.
  • Wear light-colored, loose clothing.
  • Avoid the hottest part of the day (10 AM to 4 PM).
  • Check on neighbors, especially if they live alone and don’t have good AC.
  • Know your limits. The person you were at 40 is not the person you are at 75. That’s not a failure. That’s wisdom.

A final Dog Days blessing:

May your water glass always be full. May your air conditioner hum like a happy bee. May you remember to put your feet up, wear your silly wide-brimmed hat, and laugh at Sirius from the comfort of your shaded porch. The ancient Romans thought the dog star would drive them mad. You know better. You’ll drink your pickle juice, wiggle your toes, and come inside before the world starts spinning.

And if you forget? If you overdo it? Call for help. That’s not weakness. That’s surviving the Dog Days like the seasoned, clever, wonderfully weathered human you are.

Stay cool, friends. The dog star will move on. And so will you.

Thursday, July 16, 2026

Heat Rash, Sunburn, and the Itchiness of Regret

 Let’s talk about two things that will ruin a perfectly good summer day faster than a sudden thunderstorm: heat rash and sunburn. One is a prickly little nuisance. The other is a fiery betrayal of your own good sense. Both are avoidable. Both will make you miserable. And both are very, very funny in retrospect (but not at 2:00 AM when you can’t stop scratching).

Heat Rash (a.k.a. Prickly Heat)

You’ve been outside. It’s humid. You’re wearing that nice cotton shirt, but the collar is a little snug. Or you’ve been sitting in your favorite patio chair with the plastic weave that doesn’t breathe. Later, you notice a patch of tiny red bumps on your neck, your chest, or inside your elbows. It itches. It prickles. It feels like a thousand ants having a very aggressive meeting on your skin.

That’s heat rash. It happens when sweat ducts get clogged. The sweat can’t get out, so it backs up under the skin and causes inflammation. Your body’s cooling system has a traffic jam.

The cure (and it’s easy):

  • Get cool and dry. Go inside. Air conditioning is your best friend. A fan helps too.
  • Take a cool shower and pat dry (don’t rub, rubbing makes it angrier).
  • Wear loose, breathable clothing. Cotton and linen are your summer superheroes. Polyester is the villain.
  • Do NOT use heavy creams or ointments. They’ll clog the ducts more. Calamine lotion or a light hydrocortisone cream (the 1% stuff) can help with itching, but ask your pharmacist first.
  • Stay out of the heat until the rash fades. Usually 24 to 48 hours.

Heat rash is annoying, but it’s not dangerous. Consider it your body’s passive-aggressive way of saying, “You should have gone inside an hour ago, Doris.”

Sunburn (The One You Really Want to Avoid)

Ah, sunburn. The great equalizer. You think, “I’ll just be out for twenty minutes.” Twenty minutes turns into two hours because the neighbor started telling you about their grandson’s orthodontia. And now you look like a lobster that went to a tanning salon.

Here’s the thing about sun exposure as a senior. Your skin is thinner. It’s been through a lot, decades of birthdays, gravity, and that one unfortunate tanning oil incident in 1975. It heals more slowly now. And sunburn isn’t just painful; it’s a genuine injury. It raises your risk of skin infections, dehydration, and even heat exhaustion because your skin loses its ability to regulate temperature when it’s fried.

So let’s prevent it with three absurdly simple rules:

  1. Sunscreen isn’t optional. SPF 30 or higher. Broad spectrum. Put it on thirty minutes before you go out. Reapply every two hours, or immediately after sweating or swimming. Yes, it’s annoying. Yes, it smells like a coconut factory. Do it anyway.
  2. The sun is meanest between 10 AM and 4 PM. That’s when it’s directly overhead, laughing at your floppy hat. If you can garden or walk before 10 AM or after 4 PM, you’ll get the same fresh air with about half the UV damage.
  3. Cover up like you’re going to rob a bank. Wide-brimmed hat. Long sleeves made of lightweight, light-colored fabric. Sunglasses (your eyes can get sunburned too, yes, really). There’s a reason people in hot climates have worn robes for thousands of years. Shade is power.

If you do get burned (because we all slip up sometimes):

  • Cool baths or cool compresses. No ice directly on the skin.
  • Aloe vera gel. Keep it in the fridge for extra soothing.
  • Drink extra water. Sunburn pulls fluid to the skin’s surface, leaving the rest of you dehydrated.
  • Ibuprofen can help with pain and inflammation.
  • If you get blisters, don’t pop them. That’s a bandage your body made. And if you have fever, chills, or feel nauseous, call your doctor.

A little prevention keeps the Dog Days from turning into the “Why Did I Do That Days.” Be smarter than Sirius. Slather on that sunscreen. Your future self, the un-lobstered, non-itchy one, will thank you.

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Heat Edema – Why Your Ankles Have Turned Into Biscuit Dough

You look down. You blink. You look down again. Those are your feet, yes. You recognize the bunion from 1987 and the hammer toe from that unfortunate clog phase. But why do they look like they belong to someone twenty pounds heavier?

Welcome to heat edema. It sounds like a medical condition from a Victorian novel, but it’s just a fancy way of saying, “Your ankles and feet are swollen because it’s hotter than a two-dollar pistol out there.”

Here’s what happens. The Dog Days heat makes your blood vessels expand (they’re trying to cool you off, bless their hearts). Gravity, that relentless jerk, pulls fluid down into your lower legs. Meanwhile, your body’s natural pumping action isn’t quite as zippy as it used to be. So the fluid just… hangs out. Puddles, really. And your ankles start to look less like ankles and more like stuffed sausages.

The good news? Heat edema is usually not dangerous. It’s uncomfortable. Your shoes might feel tight. Your socks leave deep grooves. You might feel a little “puffy.” But it’s rarely an emergency.

The bad news? It’s annoying. And if you ignore it completely, it can make walking harder and skin more fragile.

So let’s fight back with some very dignified (and slightly silly) strategies.

Strategy #1: Put Your Feet Up. And I Mean Up.
Not just on the ottoman. Not crossed on the coffee table. Up. Above the level of your heart if possible. Lie on the couch and stack pillows under your legs. Watch an old movie. Read a murder mystery. Let gravity work for you instead of against you. Thirty minutes of feet-up time can drain that swelling like magic. If it doesn’t work fairly quickly (within a day or two of regular elevation), then it’s time to check with your doctor. But usually? Up they go, down the swelling goes.

Strategy #2: Wiggle Those Toes Like You Mean It.
While you’re sitting (or lying with feet up), do ankle circles. Point and flex your feet. Pretend you’re writing the alphabet with your big toe. Any movement of the calf muscle acts like a little pump, squeezing fluid back up toward your heart. It’s free, you can do it while watching the news, and no one has to know you’re doing “secret foot aerobics.”

Strategy #3: Cool Water Soaks (Not Hot!).
A basin of cool, not ice-cold, water up to your ankles. Sit for ten minutes. The cool helps constrict those over-expanded blood vessels, and the water pressure helps push fluid out. Plus, it feels lovely. Add a few drops of peppermint oil if you’re feeling spa-like. You’ve earned it.

Strategy #4: Watch the Salt Shaker (But Don’t Throw It Away).
Unlike with heat cramps, where a little salt helps, heat edema means you want to be gentle with sodium for a few days. Skip the pickles and the potato chips. Eat fresh foods: watermelon, cucumbers, tomatoes. They have water and potassium, which helps flush out the extra fluid.

When to call the doctor (because I have to say this):
If the swelling is only in one leg, or it’s red and hot to the touch, or you have chest pain or shortness of breath, that’s not Dog Days edema. That’s a different animal. Call right away. Also call if putting your feet up for two days doesn’t help, or if the swelling gets worse instead of better.

But for garden-variety, “my sandals don’t fit and I look like the Pillsbury Doughboy” swelling? Feet up. Wiggle toes. Cool soak. Laugh at Sirius. You’ve got this.

And remember: even Duke the dog gets puffy paws in the heat. You’re in good company. 

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Heat Cramps – When Your Muscles Throw a Tantrum

You’ve been productive. Good for you! Maybe you watered the garden. Maybe you took a gentle walk around the block. Maybe you decided that today was the day to scrub the front porch steps because that moss was starting to look like a shag carpet.

You come inside, feeling proud. You sit down in your favorite chair. You go to stand up five minutes later,

And your calf seizes up like a fist. Or your thigh cramps so hard you yelp loud enough to frighten the cat. What in the name of all that is holy just happened?

You’ve met heat cramps. They are not polite. They do not send a warning card. They just arrive, uninvited and dramatic, like a relative who announces they’re staying for a week.

Here’s the science part, but I’ll keep it short. When you sweat in the Dog Days, you lose not just water but also salt and potassium and magnesium. Those little minerals are what your muscles use to relax after they contract. No minerals? Your muscles forget how to let go. So they stay clenched in a hot, angry knot. It hurts. It’s scary. And it’s completely avoidable.

Heat cramps usually hit the legs, calves, thighs, sometimes the feet or belly. They love to strike an hour or two after you’ve stopped moving. Just when you thought you were safe. Sneaky, right?

Here’s how to send heat cramps packing.

Prevention (the boring but effective part):

  • Salt is not the enemy (in moderation). During the Dog Days, a little extra salt, a sprinkle on your scrambled eggs, a few olives, a glass of tomato juice, helps your body hold onto the water you’re drinking. Check with your doctor if you’re on a low-sodium diet, but for most seniors, a tiny bump in salt during heat waves is actually helpful.
  • Bananas are your friend. One banana a day keeps the cramp-monster away. Or an orange. Or a handful of nuts. Anything with potassium or magnesium.
  • Water alone isn’t enough. If you’ve been sweating for hours, reach for something with electrolytes. No need for fancy neon sports drinks. Coconut water, a glass of milk, or even a small glass of pickle juice (yes, again!) works beautifully.

What to do when a cramp hits (because they will still try):

  • Stop. Do not walk it off. Do not stretch aggressively. Stop.
  • Gently massage the muscle. Imagine you’re kneading bread dough, but with more swearing allowed.
  • Apply a warm towel (not hot) or take a gentle warm bath. I know that sounds backwards, why warm when you’re hot? But the heat helps the muscle relax. Cold can make it clamp tighter.
  • Drink something with salt and sugar. A half-teaspoon of salt and a spoonful of honey in a glass of water. It tastes like tears and regret, but it works in fifteen minutes.

If the cramps last more than an hour, or if you’re also nauseous or dizzy, call your doctor. That’s not a simple cramp anymore; that’s heat exhaustion trying to move in.

Otherwise, give your muscle a little pep talk. “Thank you for your service. Now let go, please.” And then tomorrow? Drink that extra glass of water before you scrub the porch. The moss can wait. Your calves cannot.