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?
Grew up in death valley (50+°C in summer)
Moved to northern Canada (-45°C in winter)
Sometimes humanity is just stubborn. You just a acclimate over time
I am an anomaly and love the heat. I am known for wearing jeans and a hoody in 100°f heat.
That said I get cold at like 70°f and often have to add a layer.
This but opposite… It’s -35° today. Cold enough most cars won’t start unless they have a block heater…
I got a slurpee for lunch. I never giving it up. You can’t make me
For those who live in rural yet areas, Trees and streams are your friends. We ensure at least one fruit tree and another a non edible tree is on the property depending on the size of the property. This is the cheapest way of creating shade so much so you create a micro-climate for yourself. while everyone is worried about the heat, your environ is considerably cooler during the hot season and colder in the wet rainy period.
Some do incorporate airconditioning system if the structure of the house is not well designed for natural cooling process to take place.
Mental conditioning and altered behavior.
If you’re not used to it the heat can feel oppressive. Some kind of lizard-brain response telling you that the heat is a threat that must be mitigated immediately. Once you get used to it you realise that it’s just mild discomfort and that it’s not harmful (except for sun burn, heat stroke, et cetera).
You also alter your behavior in simple ways that may not occur to you if you’re not used to a hot climate. Like… make mid-day the least active part of your day. You’re not going to just duck down to the shops for a bite at 1pm.
altered behavior
After living in Phoenix AZ for a couple years I found myself seeking out shade instinctively while I was outside.
That’s the neat part, you don’t
If not for clocks and all that industrial-corporate time management shit, people in the hotter parts of the world would probably be starting work ~5am, stopping around 12-15 (hottest time of the day) for lunch + a nap, then returning to their stuff and probably going to sleep at 23
So like Spain and Italy?
I actually read an article yesterday that stated apparently siestas are are dying thing, as they result in more work and less sleep.
https://edition.cnn.com/travel/spain-late-night-culture-end/index.html
By pretending it isn’t happening by being distracted by video games
Australian Northern Territory, we have hot humid days every day.
We just sweat and be miserable.
There’s no getting used to it unfortunately just do your best to not get sick from working outside in it
Expose yourself to moderate heat as much as possible. Your body adapts and then you can handle the extreme heat better.
A lot of people hide inside with AC all the time and then it’s a shock to the system when they go outside.
Also, body composition and fitness can make a huge difference.
Have a look at the map here, and also at the satellite view. Zoom in: 37,0593067, 15,2976834
It is a >2000 year old town, still alive and inhabited (mostly by tourists nowadays). People had no air condition back then.
The buildings are made of natural stone. The walls are as heavy as possible. The streets are as narrow as possible (some can be used with a car, some cannot).
I have been there on vacation for two weeks and the effect of this way of building a city is huge! The sun barely reaches the ground in these narrow streets. The heavy walls do not heat up much in the lower floors. They keep some the ground’s coolness - and today, some of the air condition’s coolness as well, but the local people told me that they use their air condition only in the 3-4 hottest month’s of the year.
Slightly different from your question, but in Egypt we get through it by not having a wet season. The Egyptian summer is very dry and rain only falls in the winter, so we just… Exist I guess. People who grew up in a certain temperature range tend to be a lot better at dealing with temperatures in that range.
Dry heat and dry cold are much better to deal with than wet heat and cold.
Russians who strive in -30°C get cold in the 0-5°C wet mist that is much of Central Europe during winter.
Sgp here: you do social activities at night when it’s cool.
During the day you stay hydrated, electrolytes, avoid the sun, if you must be in the sun cover yourself with a hat and long sleeves.
Acclimatization takes about 3 months, then you are more or less used to it.
at night when it’s cool.
It’s not that much cooler at night. I’m still sweating the entire time. Like through a three layers and a wool suit sweating
Mate, don’t wear three layers and a wool suit in those conditions!
That would require me to buy more than one suit.
Also, I break a sweat folding laundry in my underwear in a 70F room. Not sweating is not an option for me.
Aclimatization is real. When you spend everyday at 35°, for 3 months, living your life. And then one day it’s 28°, you’re going to feel chilly. And that’s when you know you’ve adapted
I think if I spent a day at 35C I’d die.
You wouldn’t die, you would just have to remove those four layers of clothing you’re wearing
I can’t stand that heat even with zero layers of clothing.
Maybe they’ll throw me in a nice, air conditioned jail.
The temperature may not be as cool, but you don’t have the sun beating down on you. So the effect of experience is much more enjoyable
It’s a massive difference… night and day
I’m about to move further from the equator partially for this reason.
If you can, swim 2-3 times per day, or at least a quick cold shower.
At night it is at least a little more pleasant to be outdoors due to the sun not beating down and you’ll feel better for getting out and doing something.
Also seek out indoor spaces with aircon or green spaces with shade that are much more pleasant, if you can.
If you have to do manual work outdoors then god help you.
But you do get a little more used to it over time, but very high temps are always unpleasant.
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 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.
I avoid both by living in LA. We have our disasters natural and human, but our temperature is usually pleasant and always bearable.
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.
- Get dry.
- Get into an air stream like a fan
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.
Layers are the thing I hate about the cold
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
I live at the equator and it’s always ~28 degrees celsius where I live. You can get almost any temperature at the equator so that really isn’t a test of heat. Here in Colombia if you go down the mountains towards the coast or jungle it gets hotter. There the houses are built with lots of natural wind tunnel effects to keep them passively cool. When you’re outside in the heat you just get used to it. When I was in Iraq it took us a few weeks to really get used to it but even at 50 degrees celsius you eventually build a tolerance.
I was born and raised in Las Vegas. It’s a dry heat so water helps. I soak my shirt or hat and I can be outdoors for a while. Loose fitting light colored clothes and a wide brimmed hat go a long way. Stay in the shade or go out at night. Drink plenty of water, this is the biggest thing.
Indoors, a fan can help. An evaporative cooler is very effective in the dry heat. We’re spoiled so most places are air conditioned, so I try to go places that are free to be in like the mall, library, grocery store.
Malaysia:
You wake up early for outdoor stuff, like jogging or longer dog walks. I do that between 5.30 and about 7.30 (=sunrise).
Other activities throughout the day are indoors mostly, shops, malls, gyms etc. are all airconditioned.
Most homes that have a garden come with a roofed porch area with a ceiling fan, so that keeps sitting outdoors manageable except for maybe the most intense mid-day heat.
Houses here are also solid brick & concrete constructions, and retain cold air better than the wooden constructs you see in the US and Canada, so you can actually keep homes at bearable temperatures without racking up electricity bills.
That’s what got me thinking about this question initially; the home construction. I understand there’s a lot that can be done tree cover, air flow, and decent thermal material, unfortunately it seems that’s often deemed too expensive in places that aren’t consistently warmer.