Blood shed in the sky

Around this time of the year, I live feeling a fight in the sky. The fight is a tug of war between two big air masses; one in the Pacific Ocean and the other in Okhotsk Sea. These two are both high pressure air. So it is more like a "push of war". The Pacific Ocean air mass is warm and moist, while its Okhotzk counterpart is cold and dry. In winter the cold Okhotsk air mass is strong and dominant pushing the Pacific air mass far down from Japan. But when summer comes it gets weaker and gives way to the air mass from south which in turn covers the whole Japan to bring about a stable, hell-like summer.
During rainy seasons, the war front is just over Japan Archipelogo, bringing with it a lot of rain as if it was the blood shed by the soldiers of the two masses fighting fiercely in the sky.
The front moves up and down slightly and each time the temperature goes up and down, the weather changes from fine to cloudy or rainy. During this season I always see and follow the invisible war front in the sky according to the weather. If it's raining I can see the war front is right here. If it's cold the Okhotzk army is regaining its strength in the losing war. When it's hot I am thrilled to think the Pacific troops are winning the hegemony at last.
Spending rainy days thinking like this may be crazy, but I have been doing this since I learned about the fight in my elementary school. That may be why people guess I am Type B blood.