It always struck me as strange that for a coastal city,  wind was considered such a mortal risk in Naples. I'm not talking about howling winds, tornado winds or hurricane winds. I mean breezes that might just flutter summer leaves. Careful mothers in the south would not bring out a bundled baby in such conditions. What would people say?


Such wind could give a healthy child bronchitis or pneumonia in a flash, I heard over and over. God forbid wind on the stomach. No end of the trouble. I woke up once with one eye bright red from a burst blood vessel. The doctor's first question: "Were you in wind?"


On boiling hot nights when a fan (I thought) would be so nice, maybe an overhead fan, my neighbors recoiled in horror. Wind on your face at night? Wind on the stomach? Don't risk it. Wind when you're sweating? That leads straight to chills and their natural sequelae: bronchitis, pneumonia and early death. Thus the oft-heard admonition to children running about in parks in the summer: "Don't run. Don't sweat." You wonder how so many boys survived to be superb soccer players.


All this wind phobia reminded me of The Secret Garden. Remember Mary Lennox at the start of that wonderful book? Thin, sallow, unpleasant, contrary, selfish. What fixed her right up, brought color to her face, gave her appetite, improved her mind and disposition, even thickened her hair? Brisk Yorkshire wind and plenty of it. Globalization might bring depressing similarity to grocery stores of Yorkshire and Naples, but living with wind is quite a local matter.



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Published on December 27, 2011 15:34 • 18 views
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message 1: by Carol (new)

Carol Cronin What a lovely post. As a sailor I have a special appreciation for wind, so I would probably do better in Yorkshire than in Naples. Though it's also nice to know that regional differences live on...


message 2: by Pamela (new)

Pamela Schoenewaldt Also strange that Italian sailing teams do very well. I guess there are not many mothers on them.


message 3: by Carol (new)

Carol Cronin All the sailors I know are from northern Italy!


message 4: by Pamela (new)

Pamela Schoenewaldt Ah, the north. Closer to Yorkshire!


message 5: by Carol (new)

Carol Cronin If the mothers of Lake Garda feared the wind as much as the Napoli mothers, they would never have children.


message 6: by James (new)

James Allen They wouldn't like a Mistral.


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