Forgive me the blasphemy but I simply have to say it: Goddamn you, impending summer. Like the high school flirt, you walk around the block and our instant reaction is to smile at you and flush red with delight when you smile back and light up our life with sunshine
Eva Bradley: Don't fall for summer's flirting
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Only the brave bare all to experience the spring water temperatures at Mount Maunganui. Photo / Alan Gibson
You "fake it till you make it" as you walk around town with a spring in your step (because it is still spring after all) but with summer all over you, reminding you how much you miss her.
Rushing home, you pull out all the clothes you wore on hot summer dates last year and bury all your winter clothes in deep recesses where they can't be found. The next morning you wake up to find summer has left town without a word.
Although she has the cold heart, you're the one with the cold body, shivering on the doorstep, caught out like a fool with the winter coat nowhere to be found.
Convinced her absence is only temporary, you persist with your commitment to the summer wardrobe, watching the weather forecast suspiciously and then despairingly as you see summer left you to head down south and fool around with the poor buggers in Invercargill.
No doubt they needed her more there, so the heartbreak when she inevitably ditches them to return north will be worse. But just when that will be is anyone's guess, and so until that time one can simply persist with the plan to get back in shape and look so smoking hot next time she returns that she'll stay for good. Or at least shack up till late April with some sizzling El Nino action.
But that's asking for commitment, and in the roaring forties, where one of our most well-known songs, Weather With You, is about four seasons in one day, it's a brave person who commits to one season only.
And so it is that I have woollen coats pushed up against short cotton skirts in my wardrobe, and merino turtlenecks vying for space in the middle drawer beside floaty spaghetti-strap singlets.
Summer may come and go as she pleases and spread herself around the country with faithless indifference, but I have taken a few tricks from her own book and mastered the art of the mid-season commitment-phobe wardrobe.