This is the first total lunar eclipse for North America since September 2015, so I'd like to see it. However, I face challenges similar to yours, fantasia.
The long-range weather forecast indicates a cold spell coming up, with high temperatures the day of the Super Bowl (the Sunday after the eclipse) not reaching 0F/-17C. I may be a polar bear but that's a bit nippy. Skies permitting I'll probably be ducking in and out of the house to watch it (a far cry from that last one, which we could comfortably watch from chairs out in the yard).
The timing isn't good, however, as I'm too far east to see totality (centered over the Pacific). Totality starts at 0652 my time, but civil twilight (the strongest kind, and the one most people think of as dusk or dawn) begins at 0703 and the sun rises at 0734. Since the full moon is opposite the sun, it's going to be very low just when the show gets good, behind trees and houses as seen from here.
For more about this eclipse, including times and a map with visibility, see
this page.
EDIT:
This page may be more useful, at least in North America. It includes diagrams that show just how high the moon will be at the start of the partial and total phases for each of the 4 major time zones for the continent. (In my time zone it will be 17 degrees high at the start and only 6 degrees high when totality starts - well behind trees and houses as seen from here. Still, if the sky is clear, I'll give it a shot.