About Alexandra Heep:

Alexandra Heep is a longtime writer, chronic over-thinker, and recovering content mill survivor. Her work has appeared in literary journals, anthologies, and online platforms where words are still respected. She writes children’s books, health reflections, and the occasional blog post laced with humor and hard-won honesty. After years of illness, detours, and navigating the noise of modern wellness, she returned to writing with the firm belief that stories—like people—don’t have to be perfect to matter. She publishes under multiple pen names and drinks more goat milk than you’d expect.

Thursday, January 29, 2026

Just the Facts

 

First: Weather and Climate Are Not the Same Thing


Weather = what happens in the present.

  • Today’s temperature
  • This week’s snowstorm
  • That single brutal cold snap that killed your car battery

Climate = long-term pattern.
  • Averages over decades
  • Typical seasonal ranges
  • How often extremes happen
  • What “normal” looks like over 30+ years

Second: Global Warming = Planet's Average Temperature is Rising

  • It does not mean winter is canceled.
  • It does not mean cold air disappears.
  • It does not mean snowstorms have been politely asked to leave.

Third: The Polar Vortex Has Always Existed

  • Cold air stays mostly north
  • The jet stream stays tight and fast
  • Winters are cold but relatively predictable

Fourth: The Arctic Is Warming Faster Than Everywhere Else

  • The Arctic is warming two to four times faster than lower latitudes.
  •  Ice melts. 
  • Snow cover shrinks. 
  • Dark ocean absorbs heat instead of reflecting it.

Fifth: A Weak Jet Stream Lets Cold Air Escape South

  • When the jet stream buckles, Arctic air spills
  • Severe cold snaps then happen in places that aren’t built for them
  • Unseasonably warm Arctic conditions happen at the same time
  • Weather systems stall instead of moving along

Sixth: Extreme Cold During Warming Is Not a Contradiction, it's a Symptom

  • Sudden freezes
  • Rapid thaws
  • Wild temperature swings
  • Long-lasting weather events that refuse to move on

What a Fact Is

  • A fact is something that can be verified independently.
  • It can be measured, observed, recorded, or tested
  • It does not change based on belief, opinion, or repetition
  • It holds up whether anyone likes it or not

What “True” Often Means

  • “This feels right to me”
  • “I heard this a lot”
  • “This matches my experience”
  • “This fits my worldview”


Examples (Real Life)


- Our car battery froze. (fact) 
Verification: Turned key, car didn't start. Hooked up battery charger, battery voltage showed low. Replaced with new battery, car starts.

 - Our indoor hot water line in the bathroom froze. (fact) 
Verification: Turned knob, no water. Checked temperate inside cabinet where lines are, temps below freezing.

Truth claim:

“Our car battery froze and we can’t shower in the middle of winter, so global warming does not exist.”

Facts after intervention:

Changed battery → car works. Temperature outside is still in single digits.
Took Amish showers → temperature still below freezing inside the bathroom cabinet, Water line remains frozen.




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