@DrWendyWalsh (02/04) Hour 1 - podcast episode cover

@DrWendyWalsh (02/04) Hour 1

Feb 05, 202436 min
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*Special Edition* Storm Watch with @DrWendyWalsh

Transcript

This is Doctor Wendy Walsh and you're listening to KFI AM six forty, the Doctor Wendy wallsh Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app KFI AM six forty. You have Doctor Wendy Walsh with you. This is the Doctor Wendy Wall Show. I'm a little damp, my hair's a little curly. I'm an out in the rain and what rain it is? Okay? So if you're new to my show, because you've been glued to KFI like most of Los Angeles is today to get the latest news on what's happening in yet another atmospheric river

pouring down on the Southland. I want to let you know that you're in very good hands. Not only do I have a PhD in clinical psychology, I'm a psychology professor. I love to talk about mental health and the science of love. But I have a long, deep background as a news reporter. Maybe you remember me, remember k Coop? Then it became upn there I was out covering riots, fires, floods and every minute of the O. J. Simpson try So. Covering what's actually happening around the Southland is

not new to me. As I said to Tim Conway, earlier. I still have my rain outfit that I used to travel with. Okay, So during today's show, I am going to be taking your calls because I want us to come together as a community so that we can share information about what's happening around the Southland regarding this storm. I'm going to throw the number out constantly. You call it when you need to. The numbers one eight hundred five two zero one five three four. That's one eight hundred five two zero

one KFI. If you are in stranded in your car in heavy traffic, if roadways are completely flooded out, if you've been evacuated, if you're worried about a mud slide near your home. You know, back when I was a news reporter, I remember my heart breaking turning up at some of these homes on hillsides around California. And actually the most damaging tended to be ones

at the bottom of the hill where the hill came down from above. And I saw entire first floors of homes just completely three feet a mud in them. And we're praying this doesn't happen to anybody, But if this stuff is going on in your life, then we want to hear from you. We want to know where it's happening, because you are our eyes and ears. Of course, we have great news reporters out there on the ground and great first responders giving us lots of news for you, but if there's stuff that

you're hearing and seeing, we would like to know. You may be somebody who has a flat roof in southern California. That would be me, And so I tend to have a lot of anxiety in the rain. You know, maybe it is from the lack of light, maybe it is a little seasonaled effective disorder, But for me, it's that fear that there's going to be a leak and you can't get a roofer to return your calls at all. That's the deepest for me, because you're waiting and you're like, what

do you do? Like you climb up in there and put tarps down and play I've done that. Okay, I've done that these atmospheric rivers. So let's get to where we And also I want to talk about a few things happening in the news during the show, So just to let you know it's not only going to be about the rain. Are you aware that tomorrow morning jury the jury is going to begin to deliberate in Michigan, the first historic trial of a parent on trial for a mass shooting that their teenager committed.

I will have all the details of the Jennifer Crumbly trial and tomorrow her fate will be decided. At least the beginnings of the deliberation will take place tomorrow. Also, you can also call I mentioned you can call in. We'd love to hear from you. That's one eight hundred five to zero one KFI. You can also send a talk back through the iHeartRadio app. If you're listening on the iHeartRadio app. If you do haven't downloaded it yet, where

are you? Come on catch up iHeartRadio app. You press the microphone button on the top left hand corner and then you can send a thirty second message about what's happening in your area. Producer Kayla's here. She can play it on air so we can all learn. I also read Kayla that there are a few thunderstorms happening, and that's just so rare. I mean, you're from the northeast, right, Yeah, You're used to collapse of thunder with

lightning afterwards. I'm not used to rain without thunder and butting, and I heard an earthquake happens, they too, like all the water somewhere. Conway was talking about it, but I was running around, so I missed it. But yeah, it's like another heart quake again. Yes, well, we do know that there's a very high risk of flash flooding and this is

an atmospheric river. Now, to put it into perspective, in the entire month of January, the amount of aculative rain that is average for the Southland is three inches total for the entire month of January we are getting it is estimated about an inch and a half per hour, So every two hours today we're getting the entire month of January dumped on us. That's to understand how

much water is and so that you guys can understand. I mean, I know this is basic stuff, but for those who might be new to California, like Kayla, so when we have long dry spells and so much of our history has had to do with of course drought, I want you to imagine what your kitchen sponge looks like when it's sitting on the edge of the sink for twenty four hours. It gets it shrinks, it gets hard, it gets dry. Now you take that kitchen sponge and you pour it under

the water tap. What's the first thing that happens, do you know, Kayla? It gets soft again? Yeah, but what happens before that? Before we wed it? It's rock hard and crusty and gross. The water rolls off first. Oh, I'd never noticed it, you ever. Oh, take your hard sponge, put it underwater. The water rolls off first. It doesn't absorb right away. Because it doesn't it's not porous enough. So our land is not porous enough. This is why we have the flash

floods. This is why we have the mudslides right because it's not able to grip. Later in the show, we're hoping to get a firefighter on to talk about the thing that's always a quandary for me. I always have this question. When it rains hard in a given season, does this increase the risk of wildfires in the summer and fall. Hayla's running out because I know

she's calling that firefighter because I just reminded her. I watched her. She just ran out of here because I gave her the name of a helicopter firefighter. And here's the theory. And I don't know if it's true. Here's the theory that when you have heavy rains in the winter, in the spring and fall, a lot of grasses grow. Right. It's not like they're just watering the roots of the big, heavy trees that are stabilizing. You get all these new seeds that blow up, and a lot of them are

these invasive species. I don't know if you go hiking in the spring in somewhere around here when we have those super tall grasses that you're walking through. I'm laughing because Julio and I did it one time in weather like that, those tall grasses that go right up to your armpits, but the trail is kind of there and you can just move on through. And at one point we were climbing up this hill and I saw something slither to my right, and I'm like, Julio, I think that was a rattlesnake. He goes,

it's fine, it's fine, it's gonna be fine. We continue up a little bit and then I feel a slither to my left. I'm like, Julio, that's I'm sure that was another rattlesnake. He goes, it's fine, it's fine, And then he gets ahead of me and within thirty seconds, he turns around. He's storming back towards me. What are you doing? He goes, it's a colony. We're out of here. We're not doing this hike today. So yes, tall grasses, that's also where

the rattlers love to live. So I'm curious if anybody has information, call and give us a top back about whether these rings mean it increased the risk of wildfires because it creates more kindling. And remember you send that talk back by downloading the iHeartRadio app. Maybe you got it already. You press a microphone button on the top left corner and then you can record a thirty second message. So when we come back, I do want to get into our

mental health, but also as it pertains to our weather. You know, I mentioned earlier on Conway. I am Canadian and during the months, the dark days of winter January and February, I thought everybody was in a funk, because I sure was. I mean, honestly, in those months I always had a depression, but I never equated. I never associated with oh it's the darkness, or it's the cold, or it's the time of year.

It just was. I remember that I immigrated to America on April fifteenth, And on April fifteenth, maybe the sixteenth, the day after my flight, I walked down with my lily white skin, you know the kind of white skin where you can see the blue veins underneath of it. I think that's where the term blue blood came from. It's embarrassingly white. The best

I get at the end of a season is beige. And so I went down to the beach in Santa Monica and I laid down on my back and I felt the sun go into my eyelids and I literally could feel my neurotransmitters exploding with happy feelings. I didn't realize that I had suffered from seasonal effective disorder. When we come back, let's talk about seasonal effective disorder and whether just a week of rain can trigger it, also what you can do about

it for your mental health. Now you are listening to the Doctor Wendy Walls Show when KFI AM six forty were live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. You're listening to Doctor Wendy Walsh on demand from KFI AM six forty AFI Am six forty year of Doctor Wendy Walsh with you. This is the Doctor Wendy Wall

Show. We are covering weather in the Southland. If you are experiencing a weather related condition having to do with floods, tornadoes, thunderstorms, hail, we want to hear from you and hear what's going on around the city. We're going to continue to keep you posted on all the information you are going to need to stay safe. We have a listener on the call on the phone right now. Brian, Hi, Brian, it's doctor Wendy. Hi,

Wendy. I love your show. Thank you for taking my call, Thank you for having I'm in plus century right now and it is pretty bad, pretty much up to the middle of the road. People are well. Well, there's one living in High Hill. She haunked the horn and had her husband come out and moved the car on the driveway and she got out there and he had to move back out on the street. So pretty intense. But yeah, I live in a motorhole side. Oh. I was

going to say, are you in safe in a house? So now you're worried about the high winds, which are they're saying can are hitting sixty five miles an hour in some places. Do you have any experience of that out there? Yeah, I thought somebody was pushing my motorhouse. Thought there somebody who's outside pushing it, trying to wake me up or something. It was the wind. Oh my god, kind of weird, scary. I got a really weird I got a really yeah it's but I got a front row

seats, that's for sure. I got one weird question. I hope it doesn't. I love weird questions, Brian, I live for weird questions. Go ahead, Okay, do you remember the movie? It's Pat? No? Oh, I answered the weird question. So it's Pat. P a t like Patrick. Yeah, it's Pat. Yeah, it's Pat. And nobody ever knew if she was a woman or a man, and they always try to. They make two they make two movies out of it. And what's your question about people? I just want to know if you ever found

out that she was a man who or a woman? Nobody knows? You know what, I'm gonna have to put that on my Netflix list or something. It's Pat. Never heard of it? No, but god, yeah, it's it's a comedy. It's it's a really good comedy. It's really funny. But everybody she comes to encountered in uh encounters at work or doesn't. I'm a dating scene. She'll she'll date men and she'll women, but nobody knows what pat is a man or a woman. Well, there are

a lot of non binary people in the world today. I wonder how old the movie is. But thank you for that question. And please stay safe. You're in a motor home, and if you feel those winds get too high, Brian, then you need to take cover, take action, and get out somewhere. Thank you so much for that call. I appreciate it. Okay, So just to let you know, the high risk that we're talking about extends. You know, we're in a state of emergency. The

governor has announced a state of emergency. It covers all of Los Angeles County. According to the National Weather Service, they quote life threatening flash and urban flash flood is possible in all kinds of areas. But the good news is we have a record number of first responders out eighty five hundred emergency responders are out dealing with floods, landsides, slides, travel emergencies. So please don't

crowd their lines unless it truly is an emergency. Okay, because the operators who are getting the nine one one calls need to field it to the correct first responder, so please make sure it is an emergency before you make that call. We do know that this risk of dangerous flash flooding is going to continue through Monday. I happen to be a professor at California State University Channel Islands, which is in Camerio, and we've already gotten notices about basically being

careful. They have not closed the school yet. They're watching closely to see what's happening, but we have to be very careful on our commute tomorrow. Obviously, if you live in the foothills, the mountains, burn areas, you have to be prepared for the kinds of mudslides that we do see in

southern California. I find it interesting that the National Weather Service is even saying that we may experience a few severe thunderstorms, and that some of these thunderstorms, if they take place out over the specific the Pacific I'll get it out, could spawn what's known as a water spout. I had to do I'm reading about this. A waterspout is basically a tornado over the water. And then if the sixty five mile an hour winds that we can be expecting send

it inland, then it can actually turn into a bona fide tornado. Right. I mentioned that the amount of rain we get in January is three inches a month on average. We're getting an inch and a half every hour today. This is no joke. What's happening here, and it will continue through Monday and Tuesday. Unlike the recent atmospheric river that we had last week, it's not gonna go away fast. This one's gonna hang out. It's going

to go through Tuesday, maybe even longer. Watch your weather reports, stay close to KFI and so basically, the saturated soil, the more rain, the strong winds are going to continue for the next few days. This is happens to be Grammy night. To turn it over to some entertainment news. I was less interested in who one what or who wore what. I was much more interested to see who kept their hair and make up together in the rain. I mean literally, like, how does that happen that they show

up on the red carpet? They must have covered it up of course, and look together. According to Steve Gregory, apparently all the celebrities and the stars have some underground tunnels that they're able to access the build. I don't know if he was being funny. He was talking to Chris about it earlier. Cenner, Yes, they can go underground and like get their nice, dry, safe and beautiful. Did you have it to catch the open of the show when Trevor Noah was vamping for way too long, I missed it.

Is it not entertaining? No, it's very very entertaining, because he would move from table to table and you could see his brain trying to recognize who is it. Like at one point he turns, He's like, what are you doing there? Lenny Kravitz just sitting there like Lenny Kravitz like uh blah blah blah. And he would find great jokes to make about everybody. But I mean, Julio was watching it with me and he's like, why is he vamping? Something's going on because he's so off script right now and

this open is going way too long. I go, there's a reason. He's definitely filling. He's doing great at living. He's a supreme talent, he's amazing. But why and then all of a sudden, who walks in with her entourage and has to circle all the way through the room. Taylor Swift oh, and we knew Taylor Swift was late. That's what was happening

late to come and sit at her table. Maybe the rain, maybe the traffic, maybe the entourage whatever, And so then of course he has a field day talking about Taylor Swift. He goes, you know, all you people sitting near those tables that she's walking past, your local economy has been risen right now, like because she wove her way through. And then the other funny thing before we are getting back to the rain. But you know, we're all obsessed with Taylor. She's the sweet angel of the moment,

right is, he said? Instead of you know, all the criticism the NFL gets for doing close ups of Taylor during the NFL games, they have decided that for the Grammys, whenever Taylor gets mentioned, they're going to do a close up of a football player. So they immediately go to Terry Cruz and Taylor laughed, she thought that was very funny. Okay, listen, you can call any time here because we're going to be taking your calls.

We are community in southern California, and we want to know that you're okay. We want to know how bad the flooding is. If you're seeing mud slides, if the traffic is particularly bad in an area, if you're sitting in your car, call us the numbers one eight hundred five two zero one five three four. That's one eight hundred five two zero one KFI. You can also go to the iHeartRadio app. All you got to do is press the microphone button on the top left ten corner and you can record thirty seconds

that we can play. But we want to make sure everybody's okay, and if there's news happening in this storm, we want to talk about it when we come back. Let's talk about why the weather and how the weather impacts our mental health and what you can do to stay happy in the rain. You're listening to the Doctor Wendy Wall Show on KFI AM six forty. We're live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. You're listening to Doctor Wendy Walsh on demand

from KFI AM six forty. KFI AM six forty, you have Doctor Wendy Walsh with you. This is the Doctor Wendy wallh Show. We don't have much news about school closures yet here in Los Angeles except for Vineland Elementary School in Hollywood. I believe has announced that they will not be holding in person classes tomorrow. We have an LAUSD teacher on the line who can give us an update in her neighborhood. Hi, it's doctor Wendy. Hi, doctor Wendy. My name is Lossandra. How are you good? And where do

you teach? Love? I teach that seventy fifth Street eec of South la And what is your weather like? Now? It is nasty. My street is flooded. It's been raining NonStop since one o'clock this afternoon. The winds are blowing. My umbrella went down the street and it's too wet for me to go look forward. Hopefully I'll find you tomorrow. The dogs won't go out. It's just really nasty. Oh no, you got to put out those peepee pads for them so they won't right. I don't know, ruin

your carpets and your floors. So have you heard anything from LAUSD? Is your school in LAUSD School? Yes? I am la USD. The last thing that we heard was the biggest controversy on closing the schools one when Carvallo closed them last year because the hurricane that never happened, and so maybe taking slack if he dries that again and it's not as bad. Two, they're

most concerned with the children not being fed tomorrow. Over half of our students their only meals are what they receive at school, being breakfast and lunch. So if they can't come to school, they don't eat. That's a huge concern. That's heartbreaking. It's to think about that. I remember if you saw what the kids were served. Yeah, even more heartbreaking. Oh,

I remember when that topic came up during COVID quarantine too. It's like kids were able to come to school sometimes to pick up meals, right, just to get the fop wall centers, get pickup centers just for meals. Yes they did. Oh, I guess it's hard to get that together overnight. But they did say the next update will be first thing in the morning, so you'll be up thoroughly waited out looking for your messages. So what grade do you teach? I have pre k's. I get them ready to go

to kindergarten pre K fours, so they need outside playtime. Yeah, so what we do is more music and movement. We'll stay on the carpet longer, do more songs, do more calisten eggs, going on a bear hunt two or three times around the class we just found. Yeah, we definitely find ways lots of calisten eggs to get them going, to get that heart rate up and work off some of that energy. Now, I know, if you've been teaching pre K four for a very long time, I can

assure you that you have a very strong immune system. You've probably been exposed to every new bug that comes along. But when I hear about going on a bear hunt with twenty five kids in a classroom in hot, humid indoors, all I could think of it's a petri dish. Well, unfortunately, our heater hasn't worked in about three months. Also, it's actually good that we run around to keep warm. That's a whole nother story. Can we

talk about public education? How is this possible in our city that we're talking about kids who are getting substandard food, that are in classrooms that aren't heated, And may I ask you how many students are in your class four year olds? Well, since the pandemic, LAUSD has lost over three hundred thousand students, where at first my center would hold one hundred and forty four students and nothing now as of tomorrow, we're getting eight in the students, so

I think we'll be up to like seventy six. And how many in your class? Don't say there's seventy six. One clumbers around fourteen? Yeah, no, no, I'm sorry. My actual classroom is about fifth. I think tomorrow get to the students of like fifteen. Oh good, good, good good? And do you have an aid or is it just you and fifteen four year olds? I'm two as Oh good, and with rain tomorrow, like last week when it rained, I think I had six. Oh yeah, Thursday, I think I had six out of the fifteen. Oh

oh, so they don't some of our students walk to school? That's another huge concern. Oh a lot of them. Yeah, hopefully they're not walking along if they're four years old. No, no, no, no, they need an adulgence to sign them in and out. Well, Assandra, thank you so much for calling. I am going to watch closely to see if there are any more school closer closures that are announced at LAUSD. And good luck to you tomorrow. I hope you do find the bear on that

bear hunt. Thanks for calling in. Thank you so much, doctor much so, if you want to call in, let us know what's going on in your neighborhood having to do with weather related stuff. The numbers one eight hundred five two zero one five three four. That's one eight hundred five two zero one KFI. I do want to get to the neuroscience of these dark days, but before I do, I want to make sure that I mentioned that if you are a skier, this is a very good day for you.

If you are living in any of the towns in Sierra Nevada, please stay inside. I don't even know. Look, I grew up in Canada, and I remember hearing the sound of the snowplow at like four am and thinking, darn, we're not gonna have a snow day, right, And so when the snowplow did, when I heard the silence early in the morning,

and sometimes we couldn't even open our front door. You know who I'm If you live in Sierra Madre, you know that snow will just pile up outside your door and before you can even get to your car, your shoveling sidewalks and snow blowing your driveway, et cetera. Anyway, stay inside. But the good news for skiers is that we're talking about feet and feet of snow two to force feet down below anything above five or six thousand feet,

we're talking four to six feet expected of new snow. I know you skiers are like, Oh, it's gonna go for Monday and Tuesday. Maybe the roads will be open by Wednesday. We can get out there and go skiing. So for some people this is good news. However, if the storms are completely keeping you inside, then please stay safe. I'm going to tell you, guys a little Canadian trick that I want you everyone to put in your cars, especially if you live in a snow area or a cold area.

But you know, everything seems to be cold nowadays, So if you get stranded in a snow drift in your car, do not leave your car. Make sure you carry in your car with you a six inch pillar candle, like one of the ones you buy at Ikia. You can buy a whole set of them for like twelve bucks. You have one in your glove compartment. Make sure you have a lighter or matches in there too. And

did you know that you can put a six inch pillar candle. You can light it inside your car and it will give off enough heat to keep you from freezing to death. Simple Canadian trick. Right, people think, oh, I should have some warm gloves in my car. How about a fire? How about a can that would be lovely. So if you are in a snow area, hopefully you're not going to get in your car, but if you do, make sure you bring a candle with you. It's something

that all Canadians know. It's just a thing. Listen. Years ago, I remember when the Scottish comedian Craig Ferguson moved to Los Angeles. He had a little bit that was pretty funny about Los Angeles sunny weather, and what he said was, how does anyone in LA get anything done? Because in Scotland, I can't do the accent, so I can't do it. His funny way, he said, as soon as the sun comes out, everybody runs outdoors and they just hang out. They don't go to work, they

don't do anything. And he said, so every day I would arrive in LA and I'd be going to work and I'd see the sun and I'm like, oh, not going to work. I'm going to the park today, I'm going to the beach today. The sun is out. And he said he just doesn't understand how anybody in La gets anything done well. We do have these other days, these days now where we have this time of days and weeks of a little bit of darkness and a lot of rain. I

keep promising it, but we keep running out of time. When we come back. The scientific reason why rain can dampen your mood and what you can do about it. Also, if you'd like to call in and let us know how things are in your neighborhood, the numbers one, eight hundred and five, two zero, one, five, three four. You're listening to the Doctor Wendy Walls Show on KFI AM six forty with Live Everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. You're listening to Doctor Wendy Walsh on demand from KFI AM six

forty AM six forty. You have Doctor Wendy Walsh with you. This is the Doctor Wendy Walls Show. We're changing our changing it up a bit tonight, staying close to you in Southern California regarding your lives and the storm and what you're going through. If you're new to my show, I have a PhD in clinical psychology. I normally talk a lot about our mental health and also our love relationships, the science of love. But we also have a

relationship with our environment. You know, some people get cheered up by the rain. Other people experience a damper mood. Right, there's actually giants behind it. Oh did you know, by the way, that the research that's supposed to lead the weather that's most associated with a good mood is about a

temperature between sixty and seventy degrees. Now, I would have guessed it would like eighty degrees suntanning weather, but no, Apparently, nice, comfy sixty to seventy degrees with the sun out and no clouds in the sky is the best for our mood. But here's one of the reasons why when it rains like this, many people, even in just a few days, can experience a depression, a real depression in their mood. It has a lot to

do with the lack of sunlight. Right. So when the sun enters our brain, we get a release of more serotonin that's an antidepressant, more dopamine, and we do better. In fact, the other thing that sunlight is very good for, of course, is to set our circadian rhythms. We need to have that dose of morning sunlight to help us feel alert and wake up, so we start to feel lethargic when it's gray all the time.

We do know that when we get lots of sunlight, that's when we boost ourselves with those feel good hormones dopamine and serotonin, so we get a dip a depression in those. For some people, rainy weather affects their body physically right well, partly because they're less active, they're more lethargic. But for some people who have joint illnesses, joint pain, et cetera, the humidity and the barometric pressure can actually physically hurt their body, and that can be

a little bit of a downer. Some people are more sensitive to that than others. So what can you do? Can you boost your mood? Well, I want to tell you right now, keep all the lights on as bright as possible. It literally tricks your you know, normally, I'm always saying to my students I teach at cal State Channel Islands. I'm always saying, you know, you need to learn digital hygiene. You need to get off your phones at least two hours before sleep time. That blue light is

tricking your brain into thinking it's morning. Now. I'm like, get on those phones, okay. I want you to have as much light in your house going on during these dark, rainy days as possible. Also, when we feel lethargic, when we get a dip in our dopamine and serotonin, we get Some people suffer from something called brain fog, and it's very difficult for them to get organized. This is why you need to make a list.

The list might even be for household chores like I gotta change the sheets, I gotta do laundry, but it also might be about paying bills, calling people, emailing people, et cetera. I know it's rainy, don't skip your workout. You may not be able to. If you have a gym you have to drive to, then you're not going to the gym. There's a lot you can do on your living room carpet in front of a TV screen, And there are a lot of free workouts on there because I

find them on YouTube all the time. But today my fiance Julio and I did dry. He drove me to the gym in our neighborhood. And you know, all I did is put on some if I tell you, Donna Summer okay, some disco music, and then I made sure that I did my twenty minutes of cardio and that was enough to boost my mood. Right, the endorphins will come up. Also, this is not the time to do a couch potato deep dive with a bunch of junk food. Okay, well, you can do a deep dive if it's with your honey and you

want to get you know, those other hormelones going. But otherwise, this is your time to be a chef, a good healthy chef that means protein and vegetables. By the way, you can hold me accountable. I'm doing dry February. I missed Dry January because I was in France and I was drinking wine. You can't go to France and not drink wine, so there's no dry January for me. So just to let everybody know, I have

found substitute drinks that are doing just fine by me. I take. I'm telling you to do this because in rainy days you shouldn't be drinking alcohol, which is a depressant, which adds to the depression. Okay, I do now an alcoholic beer and I put it over ice, and then I squeeze in a bunch of limes, you know, like you might do at the beach with a corona or something. Anyway, it tastes so good. It's got enough acid that I crave. It's not sweet, and so that's my

goat to drink. But I've also been trying to find the best kind of non alcoholic wine, because you know, I like to just hold my glass when I have my dinner. And I found it. It's called French Bloom and it's like a rose champagne and it's really close. It's really really close. You can trick your brain into that one. All right, back to things that you should be doing. If you're feeling a little bit down during this dark days of winter and this bad weather, call up some loved ones.

I called some friends in Canada today. We had a lovely old chat. You know, it's really hard to complain about the rain and the darkness when, as Julio told me today, I have cousins that are in white Horse, Yukon territories and it's minus thirty five today, Okay, minus thirty five and zero light. Right Well, I don't want to see zero, but you know they get twenty four hours of darkness on December twenty second,

so it's starting to open up the day a little bit. So all of a sudden, I'm like, yeah, well we have rain, we have a little rain, and well, well we have a lot of a lottering and it's dangerous for people here. And they're like yeah, yeah, okay. You know, one time I was home in Ottawa for Christmas, and you know the big question Canadians always say to Californians, how can you live

there the earthquakes. Aren't you afraid of the earthquakes? Because apparently that is what our pr Department for the State of California tells the rest of the world so that we can try to reduce some of the traffic on our freeways, right, we want everyone else to be afraid to move to our paradise. So they always say, what about the earthquakes? So one time I was there in Ottawa at Christmas and I had the Weather Channel on because they keep

it on in the background all day long. It's like their important news constantly. Okay, we do it for a couple atmospheric rivers a couple times a year. They have it on twenty four seven, So the Weather Channel's on and they were talking about driver safety and they said, you know, every year in Canada, more than two hundred people die in weather related car accidents, And I thought, huh, two hundred people every year just because of the snow and the ice, skidding out, dying. So I did a

little research. How many people I google in California have died in an earthquake in the at last year, zero year before zero? Okay. Since the time I've lived in La thirty years, thirty seven people. Thirty seven people have died. Okay. So what's safer that bad weather and that darkness or us we live in paradise. Unfortunately, every once in a while, Paradise gets a reality check and it's happening right now. So all your loved ones, I know, the ones who live in the north won't feel sorry for

you. But the other people are people that you can check in with, because our social support, our connection to each other is the best thing for our mental health. And I know I say this a lot, and I know it sounds corny and very Californian, but it's true and there's absolute science behind it. Find gratitude even in the storm. You have to tell yourself that remember all those years when we complained about the drought, when we had

to turn the water off, when we brushed our teeth. I think you're still supposed to do that, when you're supposed to take short showers, or shower with a friend, or do something to save on the water. Well, now here, we are too much water and they're filling up our lakes, they're filling our snowpack. So we're gonna you know, we've been able to last year. We got ourselves out of the drought I think in most of California, and I think this is going to continue. So tell yourself,

thank thank you for the rain. The farmers are happy if the crops aren't being flooded. I'd love to get a call from a farmer actually to find out how this is affecting them. If you'd like to call in and tell us a little bit about what's going on in your neighborhood. The numbers one eight hundred five two zero one five three four. That's one eight hundred five two zero one KFI. You are listening to the Doctor Wendy Walls Show

on KFI Am six forty were live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. You've been listening to Doctor Wendy Waalsh. You can always hear us live on KFI AM six forty from seven to nine pm on Sunday and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

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