The Great Deep Freeze of 2014 brought take-your-breath-away subzero lows, emptied classrooms for two straight days and left streets deserted, cars stalled and pipes burst.
Black ice has made roads treacherous. The windchill and cold are freezing exposed flesh in five minutes.
Life has slowed to a crawl across the state.
It's a blistering cold spell destined for Minnesota winter weather lore.
In the Twin Cities, Monday night's overnight low of 23 below was the coldest temperature in a decade and practically a generation. The National Weather Service called it "a historic and life-threatening cold outbreak." Frostbite patients swamped hospital emergency rooms.
After Monday's high of 12 below, a few degrees of consolation is in sight: Tuesday's predicted Twin Cities high is expected to be near zero. But before the long slow climb toward zero begins, windchills in the early morning hours are once again expected to register at between 35 and 55 below across much of Minnesota and western Wisconsin.
The majority of Twin Cities metro school districts called off school for a second day Tuesday — elation for kids but pure panic for working parents left in another day-care lurch.
Many people heeded the advice to stay home like the kids: Minneapolis parking ramps were half full and traffic was sparse with many workers staying home or telecommuting.