outside looking in
<b>Registered Member</b>
I've never quite understood that. In science journals, I've read that people don't get sick in the winter because they "get cold" but simply because they spend more time in close proximity to other people (i.e., people tend to congregate indoors when it's cold outside). The general idea being that viruses or bacteria make you sick, not getting cold or wet.
Well, I played golf yesterday afternnoon, and it rained pretty heavily on us for the last four holes. No... I didn't stop playing, I was playing well. This morning I woke up with sore throat, headache, draining sinuses, etc.
Now, I take a shower quite often, so I get soaking wet on a daily basis. That doesn't make me sick. It wasn't cold yesterday... a nice 80F even during the rain. Quite comfortable actually. So what the hell was it that made me sick? Do bacteria fall from the sky in rain droplets? Do they splash up from the ground? Does rainwater somehow lower your immune defenses moreso than bathwater?

Well, I played golf yesterday afternnoon, and it rained pretty heavily on us for the last four holes. No... I didn't stop playing, I was playing well. This morning I woke up with sore throat, headache, draining sinuses, etc.
Now, I take a shower quite often, so I get soaking wet on a daily basis. That doesn't make me sick. It wasn't cold yesterday... a nice 80F even during the rain. Quite comfortable actually. So what the hell was it that made me sick? Do bacteria fall from the sky in rain droplets? Do they splash up from the ground? Does rainwater somehow lower your immune defenses moreso than bathwater?
