Literary Hub " What We Talk About When We Talk About the Weather
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What We Talk About When We Talk About the Weather
Ella Frances Sanders Explores Words About Weather
Ella Frances Sanders
May 11, 2026
I’ve always found the idea of accurately trying to predict incoming weather using technology slightly strange, somehow off-kilter. Useful and practical, I’m sure, but something about the standing of a lone, smartly suited person in front of a blindingly bright digital screen gesturing to this or that sits uncomfortably for me, sits impersonal. Our preference to harness and thereby control weather is only one of many impositions inflicted on natural systems, but as with other things, it marks and consistently ingrains a kind of separation between patterns of weather and our daily choices. We want to carry on with plans regardless of rainfall, regardless of extreme winds, regardless of a large snowfall. To many, weather is an inconvenience to be overcome rather than an ever-changing astonishment to be experienced.
For something that reaches into and impacts every single crevice of the planet, we use relatively few words day-to-day to describe it. It rains, or it doesn’t. It might be noted as raining either heavily or lightly, but that is about it, and wind is generally only commented on when there is either an eerily complete lack of it or it’s causing trees to fall groundward with nests being ripped from their branches. It is cold, or very cold, or unseasonably warm. The sun is unobstructed by clouds or it isn’t, and there will always be someone to declare there is either too much or too little of it.
Have you ever noticed though how seabirds flying in high winds can look like small torn-up pieces of paper, as if tossed from a window, or how crepuscular rays appear to point toward earthly things, or how animals turn their stoic faces toward the warm sun, or how owls don’t like to fly in rain, that everything is made greener by it, or how the heads of flowers will follow the sunlight, or how a covering of ice can cause you to second-guess yourself, or how it could take only a single day of strong wind for a cherry to lose every last blossom, or how much kinder people tend to be when they are warm?
At some point, we stopped shaping our days and needs in a close association with weather, stopped being able to sense it.
At some point, we stopped shaping our days and needs in a close association with weather, stopped being able to sense it. As animals like any other we could certainly know it more deeply, wordlessly even, but this knowledge cannot be stumbled upon or prescribed, and there are so few communities left who live knowing their senses fully in this way. Weather used to be one of the most consistent patterns of this planet, and therefore a daily opportunity to notice the changing sensations of one’s physical body. Our fluctuating temperatures, our comfort, the securing of a place in which to shelter or the lack of one, the tendency to seek out warmth.
The harshness or relentlessness of weather can turn friends to lovers, can cause others to lose their minds, can provoke travel across continents, can cancel plans, can reroute rivers, can flood civilizations, can incite both panic and delight, can wash away a life’s work, can set fire to forests. It provides us with both fear and fascination, with an excuse, with something to say to those we only ever encounter as strangers. We want to be out in it, but we also want to know what it wants from us. Out in a rainstorm because sometimes that can be just as appealing as watching it from behind warm windows—there is a natural craving for weather to confirm one’s aliveness, and as with storms the same can be true of being out in strong winds, or heavy snowfall, or dense mist. We want to feel alternately held by weather, lost in it, safe from it, overwhelmed by it, in cahoots with it, favored by it, protected from it.
I dream of monsoons because I’ve never experienced them, because I’m certain that such a thing would mark some irreversible change in me, and because I want to know the word for “monsoon” in twenty different...