Bostonians Need To Quit Leaping Out Their Windows, Mayor Says

Bostonians Need To Quit Leaping Out Their Windows, Mayor Says
Commuters walk between piles of snow on a street in downtown Boston, Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2015. The National Weather Service forecasts a weak weather system may bring 2 to 4 inches of new snow Thursday into Friday morning to the region, which already has seen record snowfalls this winter. (AP Photo/Bill Sikes)
Commuters walk between piles of snow on a street in downtown Boston, Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2015. The National Weather Service forecasts a weak weather system may bring 2 to 4 inches of new snow Thursday into Friday morning to the region, which already has seen record snowfalls this winter. (AP Photo/Bill Sikes)

The mayor of Boston is urging cabin fever-crazed residents to stop hurling themselves from their windows into snowbanks.

“It’s a foolish thing to do and you could kill yourself,” Mayor Marty Walsh said in a speech Monday, according to the Boston Herald.

Walsh’s admonition was in response to a rash of Bostonians filming themselves jumping out of windows or off of second-story decks into huge piles of snow and posting the videos online, like this one:

“This isn’t Loon Mountain, this is the city of Boston, where we’re trying to remove snow off of the street and it becomes very dangerous,” Walsh said.

Greater Boston resident Christina Phaup, 25, told The Huffington Post that she hadn’t even heard of anyone jumping out of their windows before Walsh’s speech.

“I haven’t had contact with the outside world in days," said Phaup, who was snowed in at her apartment over the long weekend. Now that Walsh gave her the idea, though, “I’m putting that on my to-do list.”

Phaup’s friend, 25-year-old Andrew Rosenblatt, lives in the Boston suburb of Quincy and told HuffPost he would definitely heed Walsh’s warning. However, after learning of Phaup's response, he stated, “If she’s doing it, I’m doing it.”

In all seriousness, jumping into snowbanks is dangerous.

"It can certainly be life-threatening," Dr. Tom Nowicki, an emergency physician in Hartford, Connecticut, told WFSB. "It would be very unfortunate to break your neck and lose function of your arms and legs from something that was intended to be fun."

Nowicki explained that many snowbanks are hiding patches of ice or objects that could cause physical harm. "There could be anything underneath that's covered by the snow," he said.

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