There is a specific level of chaos required before West Texans consider panicking, and a massive winter storm apparently does not meet the criteria. Roads are iced over, temperatures are frigid, and cars are sliding sideways like they’ve given up on physics altogether...YET...everyone is still driving like they are late to something deeply unimportant.
When Ice Hits the Road but Not the Ego
Right now, vehicles are drifting through intersections like it’s a low-budget Fast & Furious sequel, but no one seems interested in slowing down. Not in the least. Instead of adapting to the conditions, West Texans appear to be attempting to overpower the ice through confidence alone. Brake lights are optional, speed limits are treated as suggestions, and every sliding car seems driven by someone thinking, “I’ll be fine, probably.”
A Storm We Absolutely Did Not Prepare For
Despite living in a place that experiences extreme weather mood swings, we are once again shocked by the arrival of cold. Heaters are suddenly “acting up,” pipes are being wrapped with whatever towels were already questionable, and everyone is Googling how to stay warm, like this information wasn’t available last year, and the year before that.
Cold That Feels Personal
This isn’t just cold, it’s the kind that settles into your bones and makes you mad about it. The wind cuts sharper, the air hurts to breathe, and stepping outside feels like a personal attack. Still, people continue to run errands like it’s business as usual, bundled in three layers of resentment. (I am guilty of it too. We are all friggin' stupid.)
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The West Texas Response
What’s most impressive is the emotional response, or lack of one. There is no screaming, no mass hysteria, just a collective shrug and a quiet acceptance that this is happening now. Someone grills anyway. Someone wears shorts anyway. Someone loses power, lights a candle, and carries on like a pioneer, or whatever.
Sliding Through It Together
Cars are spinning, roads are closing, and everyone is wildly underprepared, yet the overall vibe remains calm to the point of concerning. West Texans don’t fight minor disasters. They just endure them, complain a little, and assume it will sort itself out eventually.
We’ll Talk About It Later
When the ice melts and the roads reopen, we’ll laugh about how bad it was. We’ll say it “wasn’t that bad,” even though it absolutely was. That’s the West Texas way. Calm, stubborn, slightly reckless, and somehow still standing, probably in a parking lot, watching another car slide by and thinking, “Yeah, that tracks.”
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