Daily Habits That Make Winter Easy
Once the big tasks are done, small habits keep everything humming. Use zoned heating if you have it and close doors to rooms you rarely use. Dress your windows daily: open shades to harvest sun, close them when it gets dark. Keep interior doors and vents open enough for good airflow so your system does not short-cycle.
Start With A Simple Winter Game Plan
Winterizing a house does not have to be a weekend-eating ordeal. Think of it as a short checklist, tackled in two or three passes. First, do a quick walkthrough to spot the obvious: drafty doors, rattling windows, vents blocked by furniture, and any slow drips under sinks. Note what looks urgent, what needs a quick store run, and what might require a pro. If you like, take phone photos as you go; they make it easier to remember measurements and materials later.
Carryout, Delivery, and Late-Night Logistics
Want breakfast without camping in a booth? Many Waffle House locations will happily do call-ahead carryout. You phone in the order, swing by, and grab it hot off the grill. Delivery is more hit-or-miss: some areas partner with third-party apps, while others stick to dine-in and takeout only. One thing to remember is that delivery hours may be shorter than the restaurant’s hours, especially late at night. If the app says “closed,” the store might still be open for walk-ins or carryout. Ask the staff about packaging—for waffles, a quick release from the box prevents steaming so they don’t get soggy. Hashbrowns travel decently; crisp them back up in a skillet or toaster oven if needed. Eggs are best enjoyed fresh, but they’ll still hit the spot. If you’re picking up during peak times, budget a few extra minutes: the grill line gets slammed and the cooks are juggling tickets. Patience pays off with a seriously satisfying bag.
Holidays, Weather, and the Waffle House Index
Waffle House has a legend for staying open when everything else goes dark, and there’s even a cultural nod called the “Waffle House Index” that emergency folks cite to gauge storm impact. Translation: they try—really try—to be there for you. Still, life happens. On major holidays, most locations stick to normal operations, but staffing levels or local ordinances can lead to shorter hours or brief closures. During severe weather—hurricanes, ice storms, floods—stores can temporarily close or run limited menus. If you’re planning a holiday breakfast or heading out during a storm, do that quick double-check: maps listing, a phone call, or a glance at recent customer updates. If the lights are on and the sign is glowing, odds are you’re in business. The staff that shows up on tough days deserves extra kindness; bring your patience and maybe tip a little heavier. When the world gets weird, a hot waffle and a warm counter seat can feel like an anchor.
For Teachers: Structured PD With Classroom-Ready Tools
If you teach, you want more than a great lecture; you need standards alignment, assessments, and materials that scale from bell ringer to unit plan. The White House Historical Association’s teacher programs are built for this, with rubrics, adaptable worksheets, and strategies for analyzing photos, floor plans, and ceremonial spaces. The Gilder Lehrman Institute is another reliable route: its online courses and seminars routinely include presidency topics with White House case studies, and participants can earn professional development certificates or optional graduate credit. Many state humanities councils also fund short courses or institutes on presidential history that include White House content, often led by university faculty and museum professionals. What sets these apart is pedagogy: you get structured inquiry lessons, document sets at multiple reading levels, and assessment ideas that work in a 45-minute period. When comparing PD, scan for clear learning objectives and evidence tasks (claim-evidence-reasoning prompts, DBQs, gallery walks) using authentic White House sources. That is what translates directly into stronger classroom learning.
Fit, Rise, And Length: What To Know Before You Order
Fit is where White House Black Market tends to earn loyalty. The brand offers several cuts that solve common pant problems, especially gaping waists and thigh pull. The slim ankle fits close without feeling sprayed on; it is a good option if you want a cigarette-line that still reads professional. Bootcut fans will appreciate how the flare starts low enough to lengthen the leg rather than widen the knee. The wide-leg styles drape from the hip instead of ballooning, which keeps them office-friendly. Rise skews mid to high across most options, which stabilizes the tummy area and helps tops tuck cleanly. Sizing strikes me as consistent, though if you are between sizes and prefer a very tailored look, consider sizing down; the stretch tends to accommodate curves. Petite and (in some styles) curvy options help dial in proportions, and inseams typically work with a modest heel or a flat with a tiny lift. Unless you need a very specific break, you can skip the tailor, which is always a win.