Icy roads, power outages and dangerously low temperatures have been making life miserable in many states, including some that are unaccustomed to such harsh winter weather.
In Texas, for example, people have been struggling for heat and water. State officials say the deep freeze that started Sunday crippled utilities' power generation, causing rolling blackouts or continuous outages.
Since February 11, at least 38 people have died nationwide from winter storms or frigid conditions.

Brendan Waldon repairs a utility pole in Odessa, Texas, on Thursday, February 18.
Eli Hartman/Odessa American/AP

Deloris Sanchez and Mallissa Lee sit on a couch while taking shelter at a Gallery Furniture store that was serving as a warming station in Houston.
Go Nakamura/Getty Images

Vehicles are at a standstill Thursday on Interstate 35 in Killeen, Texas.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images

City workers repair a busted water main in McComb, Mississippi, on Thursday.
Matt Williamson/The Enterprise-Journal via AP

Metropolitan Transit Authority workers shovel the stairs of a subway station in New York City on Thursday.
Mark Kauzlarich/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Emanuale Small walks up to a bus station in Roanoke, Virginia, on Thursday. Small had to make it to a doctor's appointment, and he was told they would push the time back a little for him so he could still make it despite the icy conditions.
Heather Rousseau/The Roanoke Times via AP

People take refuge at a shelter in Galveston, Texas, on Thursday.
Adrees Latif/Reuters

Cars drive slowly on an icy road in Washington, DC, on Thursday.
Eric Barardat/AFP/Getty Images

Jose Blanco fills a cooler with water from a public park spigot in Houston on Thursday. Houston and several surrounding cities were under a boil-water notice.
David J. Phillip/AP

Snow falls in New York's Times Square on Thursday.
Kena Betancur/AFP/Getty Images

Snow is plowed outside the US Capitol on Thursday.
Al Drago/Bloomberg/Getty Images

Jonathan Callahan expresses his gratitude after being referred to the warming shelter at the Johnnie Champion Community Center in Jackson, Mississippi, on Wednesday, February 17. Some people staying at the shelter had lost power, water and heat at their homes following the winter storms. Others were homeless. Food, blankets and cots were provided.
Rogelio V. Solis/AP

Charles Andrews walks home through his neighborhood in Waco, Texas, on Wednesday. Millions of people were still without power.
Matthew Busch/AFP/Getty Images

Nathan Halaney and Katherine Pena help their neighbor, Brenda Davis, from the scene of a nearby structure fire in Austin, Texas, on Wednesday.
Tamir Kalifa/The New York Times/Redux

Eric Traugott warms up his young son, Eric Jr., beside a fire made from a discarded wooden armoire outside of their apartment in Austin on Wednesday.
Tamir Kalifa/The New York Times/Redux

Downed and broken trees are seen over a rest stop in Huntington, West Virginia, on Wednesday.
Sholten Singer/The Herald-Dispatch/AP

Sara Castillo loads firewood into her car in Dallas on Wednesday. Castillo's family lost their power on Sunday.
LM Otero/AP

Customers wait outside a Home Depot to buy supplies in Pearland, Texas, on Wednesday. The store would let only one person in at a time because it had no power.
Thomas Shea/AFP/Getty Images

A family in Austin melts snow on their stove so that they could have water to flush toilets and wash dishes on Wednesday. Their electricity had been restored, but they still didn't have running water.
Ilana Panich-Linsman/The New York Times/Redux

Kendra Clements visits dog owner Billy Madden -- with his dogs Leroy Brown and Underdog -- at Tribe Gym, an Oklahoma City gym that has been turned into a temporary homeless shelter.
Sue Ogrocki/AP

Manessa Grady adjusts an oil lamp while spending time with her sons Zechariah and Noah at their home in Austin on Tuesday, February 16.
Tamir Kalifa/The New York Times/Redux

Maria Patterson breastfeeds her infant daughter Tuesday at their home in Austin, which hadn't had power since Sunday night.
Ilana Panich-Linsman/The New York Times/Redux

Electric service trucks line up in Fort Worth, Texas, on Tuesday.
Ron Jenkins/Getty Images

Karla Perez and Esperanza Gonzalez warm up by a barbecue grill after their power was knocked out in Houston on Tuesday.
Go Nakamura/Getty Images

Jorge Sanhueza-Lyon stands on his kitchen counter to warm his feet over his gas stove in Austin.
Ashley Landis/AP

Sunlight filters through steam in Omaha, Nebraska, where temperatures dropped below zero on Tuesday.
Chris Machian/Omaha World-Herald/AP

Camilla Swindle sits in a shopping cart as she and her boyfriend wait in a long line to enter a grocery store in Austin on Tuesday.
Tamir Kalifa/The New York Times/Redux

Brett Archibad entertains his family as they try to stay warm in their home in Pflugerville, Texas, on Tuesday.
Ricardo B. Brazziell/Austin American-Statesman/USA Today Network

Residents clear snow from a sidewalk in Chicago on Tuesday.
Scott Olson/Getty Images

Customers use light from a cell phone as they shop for meat at a grocery store in Dallas on Tuesday. Even though the store lost power, it was open for cash-only sales.
LM Otero/AP

A United Airlines jet is de-iced at the George Bush International Airport in Houston.
David J. Phillip/AP

A snow plow clears a parking lot in Columbus, Ohio, early on Tuesday.
Maddie McGarvey/The New York Times/Redux

City worker Kaleb Love works to clear ice from a water fountain in Richardson, Texas, on Tuesday.
LM Otero/AP

Steam rises off the frozen Missouri River in Kansas City.
Charlie Riedel/AP

Bethany Fischer washes her face as her husband, Nic, lies on a mattress at a church in Houston on Tuesday. The couple lost power to their home.
David J. Phillip/AP

Homes in the Westbury neighborhood of Houston are covered in snow on Monday, February 15.
Mark Mulligan/Houston Chronicle/AP

James Derrick, who is homeless, peeks out of his tent in Oklahoma City on Monday. The city had gone a record five days without climbing over 20 degrees, and it wasn't expected to top that temperature until Thursday.
Nick Oxford/Reuters

Motorists take it slow in Indianapolis on Monday.
Grace Hollars/IndyStar/USA Today Nework

A city employee clears sidewalks in South Bend, Indiana, on Monday.
Michael Caterina/South Bend Tribune/USA Today Network

Austin, Texas, is blanketed in snow on Monday.
Tamir Kalifa/The New York Times/Redux

Eithan Colindres wears a winter coat inside after his family's apartment lost power in Houston on Monday.
Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle/AP

Two women cross Main Street as snow falls in Bowling Green, Ohio, on Monday.
J.D. Pooley/Sentinel-Tribune/AP

A boy feeds his pigs in St. Joe, Arkansas, on Monday.
Terra Fondriest/The New York Times/Redux

Ice coats a road sign in Midland, Texas, on Monday.
Matthew Busch/Bloomberg/Getty Images

Kirk Caudill shovels snow in Louisville, Kentucky.
Pat McDonogh/Courier Journal/USA Today Network

Vehicles clear ice at the international airport in Nashville, Tennessee, on Monday.
Brett Carlsen/Getty Images

Crews unload snow that they removed from city streets in Oklahoma City.
Chris Landsberger/USA Today Network

People help a stuck motorist in Oklahoma City on Monday.
Nick Oxford/Reuters

People walk on a snowy road in Austin on Monday.
Montinique Monroe/Getty Images

Men shovel ice and snow in front of shops in Louisville, Kentucky, on Monday.
Pat McDonogh/Courier Journal/USA Today Network

A few cars drive in San Angelo, Texas, on Sunday, February 14.
Colin Murphey/San Angelo Standard-Times/USA Today Network

People enter a Covid-19 testing site in Seattle on Saturday, February 13. Seattle reported more than 11 inches of snow over the weekend, its most since January 1972.
David Ryder/Getty Images

Harrison Walsh skis by Seattle's Pike Place Market on Saturday.
David Ryder/Getty Images

Cars drive along Interstate 705 as snow falls in Tacoma, Washington, on Saturday.
Joshua Bessex/The News Tribune/AP