Baby, It's Cold Outside… And That's No Joke for Seniors

Jan 24, 2026

6 min

Sue Pimento

How cold is it?


• It's so cold I saw a dog stuck to a fire hydrant.

• It's so cold my words froze mid-air and my neighbour had to thaw them out to hear what I said.

• It's so cold, I just saw a politician with his hands in his own pockets.


Okay, I'm joking—but just a bit. Because while I enjoy a good cold-weather quip, hypothermia isn't funny. 


Currently, this severe Arctic blast is gripping Canada and large parts of the United States, dropping temperatures 20–40°F (11–22°C) below seasonal norms across a 2,000-mile stretch of North America. Nearly 80 million people are under winter storm warnings. Power outages are anticipated. Roads could be impassable. Travel is about as appealing as a root canal in a snowstorm.


For many seniors on both sides of the border, this isn't just an inconvenience—it's a real safety risk.


The Cold, Hard Stats (Brace Yourself)


Looking at the research I couldn't believe what I found:


Older adults are more than 5x as likely to die from hypothermia as younger adults (Kosatsky et al., 2015).


In the U.S., approximately half of all hypothermia deaths are people over 65 according to data from the CDC.


In Canada, adults over 75 are more than 5 times more likely to die from hypothermia than younger adults—and 87% of those deaths happen right in their own homes. (StatsCan Health Infobase )


Read that again. Slowly.


Not on frozen lakes. Not stranded on highways. Instead, in familiar living rooms. Sitting on well-worn couches. Beneath afghans crocheted by someone who loved them.


Why Your Body Becomes a Cold -Weather Traitor


Our bodies change as we age, and not in the fun "I've earned every wrinkle" way. The insulating fat layer under the skin thins. Circulation slows. Metabolism drops like your interest in small talk.


Certain medications—prescription and over-the-counter cold remedies—can interfere with temperature regulation and awareness. Your body's thermostat? It's on the fritz.


Here's the math: Hypothermia doesn't require a blizzard. It can begin indoors when temperatures fall below 65°F / 18°C.


And here's the truly dangerous part: hypothermia affects the brain first. Judgment declines before shivering becomes severe. You don't realize you're in trouble. You just feel "a bit chilly" while your core temperature quietly drops.


Stop Acting Your Age! (But Also... Dress as if you know your age)


I'm all for embracing life at every stage—hiking to Everest Base Camp at 60-something, teaching Zumba, and that MBA thing at 70, refusing to "act your age." But embracing life in this weather requires wisdom, not bravado.


Cold weather brings real risks:

• Slips and falls on icy surfaces (and no, we don't bounce like we used to)

• Increased risk of heart attack and stroke because cold thickens the blood

• Respiratory infections that linger far too long

• Frostbite on fingers and toes

• Hypothermia that clouds thinking before any alarms sound.




The Indoor Survival Guide—Keep Up

(Yes, You Can Get Hypothermia at Home)


Set the thermostat to at least 68–70°F (20–21°C).  This is not a time to be a miser.  Heating bills can be expensive, but hospital stays are even more costly. And they don't even give you warm blankets anymore.


Layer like a pro. This is not the time for fashion minimalism. Think:

• Long underwear or thermal leggings

• Pyjamas under clothes

• Stockings or tights under pants

• Two pairs of socks

• Warm boots with good tread (essential for any outdoor ventures)

• Shirts layered under sweaters


When it's this cold, if you still own leg warmers—congratulations. Wear them. The warmth is worth the call from the '80s asking for them back.
Hats indoors are permitted. This isn't a fashion show; it's survival style. You lose a lot of body heat through your head. Emulate your inner Elmer Fudd if you need to.


Carbon monoxide alarms are essential & in many areas legally required.  When temperatures drop, people get creative—and desperate. Space heaters, fireplaces, generators, kerosene heaters, or (please, dear God, don't) using gas ovens for heat. That last one is about as safe as texting while skydiving.  And here's an important PSA: Starting January 1, 2026, Ontario's updated fire code mandates a functioning carbon monoxide alarm on every level of homes that have fuel-burning appliances. Remember to test alarms when you change your clocks for daylight saving time—it's easy to do, and not easy to forget.


Block drafts like you're defending a castle. Roll towels under doors, seal windows, close unused rooms, open curtains during sunny days, and close them tightly at night.


Check your medications. Ask your pharmacist or doctor if any prescriptions or over-the-counter remedies influence temperature regulation or alertness. Knowledge is power—and warmth.


Check Food & Other Supplies.  If venturing out feels risky, order groceries for delivery. Services like Voilà by Sobeys, Instacart, PC Express, and many local grocers deliver directly to your door.  This isn't laziness—it's smart risk management. Most delivery services are free or inexpensive, especially when compared to the alternative: icy sidewalks, falls, broken hips, or getting stranded in extreme cold while wearing inadequate footwear because "it's just a quick trip."


Clear Your Snow.  Snow and ice hinder movement. Limited movement results in isolation. Isolation worsens depression and cognitive decline.  Clear snow isn't just about safety—it's about dignity.


Pro Tip: Protect Your Pipes (and Your Wallet).  Winter power outages can mean burst pipes and serious water damage. If you expect a prolonged outage:


• Know where your main water shut-off is

• Turn it off

• Open faucets to drain the lines


It feels extreme—until it doesn't. Until you're standing in three inches of water at 2 a.m., wearing your emergency leg warmers.


Know or Live Near an Older Adult?  Here's Your Cold Weather Action Plan


Don't ask if they need help—just do it. Clear the porch. Shovel a path. Salt the steps.

Think of it as the winter cousin of snow angels: shovel angels. Be one!


When people Are Shut In—Go check in with them. For those stuck indoors, reach out by video, not just text or voice. Seeing someone tells you far more than hearing "I'm fine."


Use FaceTime, Zoom, WhatsApp, or Google Meet. Do this with older people you know.  Because pride prevents people from asking for help. Shame prevents people from being honest—about empty fridges, sleeping in mittens, or wearing coats to bed.


Look for these signs:

• Confusion or slurred speech

• Shivering—or lack of it (paradoxically dangerous)

• Pale or bluish skin

• Slow movements or lack of coordination

• Extreme fatigue


Know When to Call for Help

If something feels off, err on the side of safety.

In Canada:

• Telehealth Ontario: 1-866-797-0000

• Quebec: 811

• Other provinces: Know your local health line


If you notice any signs of distress—confusion, chest pain, shortness of breath, severe cold exposure—or if you're unsure, call 911. Cold-related emergencies escalate rapidly.



The Culture Shift We Need—Right Now


Cold snaps reveal faults in our systems and communities. This is the time to foster a check-in culture: a call, a knock, a cleared walkway, groceries dropped at the door.


Preparation matters. Connection matters more.  Winter is temporary. The habits we build to take care of one another are not.


Be cool—and stay warm out there, friends.


Sue


Don’t Retire… Rewire!


What are your best winter safety tips? Share them—because staying warm is better when we do it together.



Want more of this? Subscribe for weekly doses of retirement reality—no golf-cart clichés, no sunset stock photos, just straight talk about staying Hip, Fit & Financially Free.





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Sue Pimento

Sue Pimento

Founder | CEO

Writer, author & presenter focused on financial literacy and retirement strategies. I advocate for the health, wealth & purpose for retirees

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When the Cheque Stops Coming: Canada Post, Seniors, and the Quiet Cost of Modernization featured image

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One expired password or one convincing phishing email can turn a simple task into an afternoon of confusion. It is easy to underestimate the value of paper systems when you no longer rely on them. It is harder to replace them when you still do. Efficiency Has a Way of Moving Downward There is a pattern in modern service design worth naming. Call it effort laundering: the practice of shifting work from institutions to individuals in the name of efficiency. We see it in banking, where branches quietly disappear. We see it in healthcare systems that assume patients are comfortable online. We see it in customer service models built around apps and automated menus. And now we may see it in mail delivery. Where the service moves from your front door to a location you must reach yourself. For many Canadians, this is manageable. For others, it is not. When the burden of efficiency lands on those least able to absorb it, the system may be efficient on paper but inequitable in practice. 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Notably, Canada’s digital divide among seniors is more pronounced than Denmark’s, meaning the proportion of older Canadians who cannot easily go online is higher to begin with. Even so, a significant number of Danish residents have been classified as "digitally exempt" and continue to rely on alternative arrangements to receive essential communications (PostNord, 2025). Canada is not Denmark. Our geography is larger, our winters are harsher, and our population is more dispersed.  Also, we play better hockey.  If Home Delivery Changes, People Will Adapt Canadians are remarkably adaptable, and seniors are often the most resourceful of all. If home delivery is reduced, practical solutions will emerge. Neighbours will organize. Families will build mail pickup into regular visits, turning a logistical task into a reason to connect. Some seniors will finally set up paperless billing, one account at a time. These are workable adjustments. But they should be supported by thoughtful policy, not forced by avoidable design choices. The Problem With Accommodation Accommodation programs will likely exist, but their effectiveness depends on how easy they are to access. Systems that require people to search, apply, document their needs, and follow up repeatedly tend to favour those with the time and persistence to navigate them. The seniors who most need support are often the least inclined to engage in that process. The real test is not whether accommodation exists. It is whether it is simple, visible, and available before a problem becomes a crisis. This Is About More Than Mail At its core, this debate is not really about mail. It is about independence. It is about whether people can continue to manage their own lives without unnecessary friction. It is about whether public systems are designed for real users rather than ideal ones. The ideal user is mobile, tech-savvy, and well-supported. The real user may be older, living alone, and quietly determined to remain independent. That determination deserves to be supported, not complicated. Modernization, With a Memory Home delivery is not just a legacy feature. For many seniors, it remains a small but meaningful part of how life stays organized and manageable. When that support disappears, the burden does not disappear with it. It shifts to individuals, to families, and to systems that will eventually feel the impact. If the greatest disruption falls on those least able to absorb it, the design needs a second look. And About That Cheque... We may be moving toward a world where fewer things arrive by mail. That is probably inevitable. But before we retire the idea entirely, it is worth remembering why that old line worked in the first place. “The cheque is in the mail” was believable because the system behind it was dependable. It showed up. It connected people. It did its job quietly and consistently.  Modernization should aim for the same thing.  Not nostalgia. Not resistance to change. Just reliability that works for everyone. Because if the day comes when the cheque is no longer in the mail, we should at least be able to say that whatever replaces it works just as well for the people who need it most. Ideally, without requiring ice cleats, a flashlight, and a willingness to sign a waiver. Sue Don’t Retire…ReWire! My Book is Now Available for Pre-Order I hope you will consider pre-ordering a copy of Your Retirement Reset for you, a friend or loved one.  It's available September 8, 2026 - You can now order on the ECW Press site here. And if you love supporting Canadian booksellers, please also check with your local independent bookstore. Most can easily order it for you.

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