Wednesday, July 22, 2009

The Cold Enemy: Air Conditioning

There are two words that when I hear them I want to scream: “Air” & “Conditioning.” Put them together and they mean that marvelous invention that sucks out humidity and blasts dry cold air. For some reason, Italians blame it for everything, every malattia (illness). It’s the Antichrist.

“I can’t sit near air conditioning; shut it off,” said one of my cousins during dinner at a restaurant. She was referring to a white thing positioned on the wall behind her that slowly emitted puffs of air. I sweated during that dinner.

“Don’t put the air conditioning, I have to work tomorrow and I can’t have a headache,” said another cousin when we drove to Piemonte. Another time I sweated and could not breathe because they also refused to open a window for the same reason.

They even converted my friend Melinda into a believer.

But what makes me want to scream about the invention that the Italians use as a scapegoat, which I’m sure came from the new world, is that it barely exists here. I can literally count on my fingers the few times I have actually stepped into a room with air conditioning. Let me be more accurate, I can count on my fingers the few times I have actually stepped into a cool room with air conditioning in Florence.

I have been sick this week. I have suffered all my life from chronic ear infections. Without warning my ears are blocked and an excruciating ping of pain takes over, so strong that I cannot speak.

Of course the Italians have their homemade remedies to cure my pain. My roommate once told me to put a scarf around my neck. I wanted to kill her, but I was in too much pain to argue. A scarf does not cure nor silence the pain of an ear infection, nor does it prevent an infection. She eventually took me to the emergency room.

This week my left gland was noticeably swollen. I felt fine. Just as a precaution I went to the Pronto Soccorso, (emergency room). My doctor was so nice, he waved the payment because I told him I was a broke immigrant, he showed the location of the eye hospital in case I needed a check-up, and he gave me advice about getting my tessera di sanitaria, the national health card.

He said the swelling was because I was getting an infection, in both ears, again. When I asked him why he said, “well you go from hot air to cold air; in and out of the air conditioning.”

I still carry my sarcasm from NYC, but it doesn’t come across quite the same in Italian.

“Air conditioning,” I said rhetorically. “oh yeah, cause it’s…,” I began to mumble. I noticed he was not laughing just looking at me with a blank stare.

Then I could not remember how to say “I’m joking” in Italian.

“See doctor, it just doesn’t exist anywhere I go, none of the bars or restaurants have it and I do not have it in my home,” I said.

“Well maybe when you get in and out of your car,” he said

That’s when I decided to just play along. If the doctor was smart he would have taken my shock over paying 26 euros for a visit as a sign that I cannot afford to own a car. Moreover why couldn’t he just admit he did not know why I was sick, instead of blaming it on air conditioning?

When I got home I called my friend Christine to judge the believed culprit — Air Conditioning. During the conversation she told me her allergies have been acting up the past few days. That’s when I realized what was probably causing my unnoticeable slight congestion, leading to an eventual infection. The last time I had an infection, I was also suffering from allergies. Thank God I have an American friend to consult with.

5 comments:

Emily Clancy LoPorto said...

Love your blog/writing! When I lived in Florence, the agent helping us find a place kept insisting that AC wasn't a good idea for the baby. I told him it WAS a good idea for ME! Soak it up when you can!

Rebecca Wine said...

Fab post. So true, in my car I have to have a two-aired system: one on me (cool), one on him (or any other Italian) on the passenger seat (blowing warm air) in 34 C heat!!!

Natalie Trusso Cafarello said...

dear em,
thanks for reading. i hope you opted not to take the agent's seemingly unsolicited advice i got the AC.

Rebecca,
93 degrees Fahrenheit!I was in the car recently with someone, i cannot remember who and it was about the same temperature, no AC and the were telling me how they loved the hot weather.

thanks for reading ladies,

natalie

Barbara said...

Ha! I stumbled upon your blog and I laughed and laughed! I live in Naples and I'm originally from California. I always said that I LOVE the heat and humidity. But I never truly understood heat and humidity without AC until this August. Now I can't wait for winter. Life without AC in Italy is truly insane for us Americans. And blaming all ails on it -- yep, that's my experience too.

Saluti from down south!

Natalie Trusso Cafarello said...

Barbara,

Thanks for writing. I am glad you found the post funny. I think they blame AC for everything because they don't know what the real cause of the ailment is.
stay cool in Naples,

Natalie