
Stepping out in the Indian summer isn't really a commute, it's more like survival training. The heat hits you the second you put a foot outside. By the time you are in the metro or reaching the office gate, struggling in the auto-rickshaw, your makeup has turned into a mess, your hair has lost it and your energy meter is down a big chunk. For women, there is extra pressure. Already dealing with sweat, tanning, dehydration, the constant background pressure of still looking ‘presentable’ is a lot. However, some working women still somehow figure it out. Not just through Pinterest routines, but through small, genuinely useful tricks. Here are five of them.

The classic mistake many women make is planning their outfit entirely around how you'll look at your desk, with zero consideration for the 45-minute struggle of actually getting there. That fitted synthetic kurta or structured top looks pretty at home. After half an hour in this heat and traffic, it's a different situation. The smarter approach is to start with fabrics like cotton, linen, light rayon and working style around that. They actively help with airflow and keep sweat minimum. Oh, and lighter color? they genuinely feel cooler under direct afternoon sun. Comfort during an Indian summer is not a compromise, it is a must. For office, a number of women have adopted a very practical solution: a blazer, formal shrug, or a pair of office heels live permanently at their desk. They commute in whatever is light and breathable, and change once they arrive.

Sunscreen? check. Hydration? not really, until by 3 pm a sharp headache arrives and everything feels terrible. Dehydration during summer commutes is common. It builds slowly, and by the time you notice you're dehydrated, it has gotten late. Air-conditioners in offices make this worse, they give you false comfort while your body stays dehydrated underneath. The hack many women use is to carry two kinds of hydration. Plain water, and something with electrolytes. Coconut water, nimbu paani with salt, chaas, or an ORS sachet do the job nicely. One more thing, drink water before you leave home, not when you reach the office. Once your body is already sweating in peak heat, it's playing catch-up the whole day. A small insulated bottle is a useful thing you can also carry.

A small dedicated pouch inside your bag can genuinely rescue your day. With essentials inside like face wipes or a small towel, deodorant, a hair tie, sunscreen, lip balm, safety pins, a little talcum powder, sanitary products, and a foldable stole or scarf. Scarves are pretty handy in the heat. It handles sun exposure on the way out and dust in traffic. And then there's the hack that sounds over-the-top until one suffocating humid commute changes your mind forever. Keep a spare innerwear or a T-shirt tucked away at your desk during peak summer weeks. You will use it.

Sweat, pollution, UV exposure, and humidity can leave hair frizzy, sticky and damaged.. And no, washing your hair every single day is not always the solution. It often makes things worse. Protective hairstyles are the practical answer, braids or buns. They reduce sweat around the neck, prevent tangling, and simply hold up better through a commute. A few drops of a good hair serum before you leave can also make a big difference. If you're on a two-wheeler, use a soft scarf. It would protect you from direct sun exposure.

Here's something that doesn't get talked about enough. Most people step off a brutal commute and immediately launch into full work mode. Checking emails, taking client calls, etc, while their body is still overheated and their mind is still on the road. That transition matters. Women who seem to handle summers more smoothly tend to have a quiet five-minute reset before officially starting their day. Cool water on the face, a few minutes of just sitting still, drinking something cold. That's genuinely it but it gives the body a break. Some keep a facial mist or a small ice roller in their desk drawer too.
This summer, instead of trying to look unbothered, focus on making your routine a little lighter, a little smarter, and a little kinder to yourself. Surviving an Indian summer commute with any grace at all is, in the most sincere way, an achievement.