I live in a pretty hot climate, but it’s only really unbearable at times due to shoddy building and bad urban planning. Even then, summer can be difficult.
I can’t imagine what it’s like on the equator, especially in dense urban centres. What’s Mumbai, Bangkok, or Singapore like at the height of the wet season?! How do millions of people function day to day?
I wonder the same thing about people who live in cold environments. I’ve never seen snow, and I know I won’t handle it, because I can’t handle single digit (Celsius) temperatures, let alone below 0…
With cold, you can layer appropriate clothing. And you can find much better appropriate clothing for purchase in the places that require it than you can find in your shops, along with advice from people who live there. Just don’t follow the example of the cargo shorts at -40° boys.
I’d rather be blistering hot than wrapped up in layers and living inside stuffy heated buildings
I avoid both by living in LA. We have our disasters natural and human, but our temperature is usually pleasant and always bearable.
I live in central Europe, fuck the cold, fuck all the layers have to put on, i’d be rather drenched in my ballsweat than this shit.
My mood/mental health/general will to live noticeably nosedives as the cold temperatures come around.
Cold is easy, wear more, burn stuff for heat.
Hot is hard. When I’m already fully naked and still sweating, what then? Lightly fan myself with something?
Actually yeah.
Your perspiration into dry air has an evolved cooling effect. It’s the same principle used by the ‘zeer’ pot to keep stuff cool in high temps with no electricity (and that’s a freaking magic trick, lemme tell ya).
But, now see why the rising “wet bulb” temp is an issue in the lower US and toward the equator with the rising temps: if it doesn’t evaporate, you’re in trouble.
”But it’s a dry heat” is a saying for a reason 😀
Colds not too hard to deal with at all. As the other poster mentioned, when outside, the trick is layers.
Inside, it’s actually very easy to trap heat. Knowing where and how it dissipates in a house makes a huge difference, but it’s generally much easier to heat a place than cool it.
Currently in Canada. Tomorrow will be like, 5F (-15C). Layers are king.
That said- normally I’m pretty good with cold temperatures, but these are the temps at which it hurts to breathe. And somehow there’s still people walking around in basically nothing