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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Vancouver, BC
    Posts
    197

    Red face

    Same here... I remember when I was a teen, I used to wear skirts with pantyhose in the winter. Didn't bother me a bit. Now, even with my knee socks, my body is freezing. I keep thinking, long johns with jeans isn't that bad, is it?

    Then my BF delivers out at UBC, he sees girls with mini skirts and just wonder how in the world can they walk in heels and wear next to nothing in such cold temp. Guess when we are young, nothing bothers us.

    Heck! I remember staying up all night talking to friends, go clubbing, etc... way past 3am. Now I have a hard time staying awake past 11pm. Guess I'll sleep pass the New Year again this year.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Scotland
    Posts
    436
    I notice this phenomenon when I'm accidently out in the big city (Edinburgh) on a Saturday night. The kids are going about in shirts and tops flashing their midrifts while I'm wrapped up in my woolly coat, hat, gloves and scarf.

    There's nothing like that experience to make a person feel old. And I wear sensible shoes
    If it's not one thing it's another

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
    Posts
    14,498
    There's acclimation and there's aging, and I'm pretty sure both play a part.

    It takes me a good month for my body to acclimate to the temperature every time I move. My ex-husband served in the Air Force in Thailand, and he tells a story about coming home to Ohio in August when it was 85° and humid, and being just freezing, literally had to wrap himself in blankets. And he was 20 years old then. Except, although I can get used to humidity, I still can't breathe in it - even the one time we were here for a year and a half, I breathed MUCH better as soon as we came home, and that wasn't just emotional.

    My parents (in their 70s) still keep their house freezing cold and sleep in the basement, but that's stubbornness. I gave up trying to tell them how the cold and damp in that house was damaging MY health even on short visits oh, about 30 years ago, and now that the damage to THEIR health has accumulated, they just don't care and I'm sick of telling them.

    For the most part though, it does seem like people lose the ability to tolerate cold when they get older - my in-laws keep their home super hot, and I can't tell you how many times I've visited elderly clients whose thermostats were set at 78 or 80 in winter, even when they couldn't really afford such a high utility bill. And like you guys, when I was a kid I know I used to go around in the cold out of stubbornness and machismo. But I think it has as much to do with not feeling like I need to prove anything at my age, as anything else.

    But I've read that from a health standpoint, as you get older, while warmth may feel good, your body actually loses the ability to tolerate heat, and the #1 weather-related killer is actually heat, not tornadoes, hurricanes or earthquakes.
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Michigan
    Posts
    865
    I'm a cheapskate and keep my house around 62 in the winter. The kids (teenagers) complain. I have a problem with dampness, but it can be extremely cold out and I'm fine as long as it is dry. My daughter comes home from college where her room-mate from a southeast asian country keeps the thermostat at 75.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Wyoming
    Posts
    271
    I really really dislike cold. Not fun. Ever.

 

 

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