I mean its true, dont get mad at me. Activity begets heat...so on a cold day, being active helps mitigate the weather. When its hot, the last thing you wanna do is sweat or be active, which will only warm your body up even more.
I mean its true, dont get mad at me. Activity begets heat...so on a cold day, being active helps mitigate the weather. When its hot, the last thing you wanna do is sweat or be active, which will only warm your body up even more.70 degrees damn near ey'day in beautiful San diego.
In any event, although extreme weather sucks, Ill take excessively cold over excessively hot. At least with excessively cold (within reason) you can still function and perform day-to-day activities --- plus it gives you an excuse to get ass on some "we need some body heat up in here" ish.
Anything over 90 degrees, and all activity grinds to a standstill outside of, perhaps, swimming. All you can think about is how hot you are, and unless you ballin', A.C on all day is out of the question. Cold weather promotes activity, hot weather restricts and sucks the life outta you.
get the fukk outta hereI agree that hot weather can suck the life outta you, but cold weather promotes activity?get the fukk outta here
Relative to hot weather of course. If you're cold, your natural inclination is to warm up

Relative to hot weather of course. If you're cold, your natural inclination is to warm up

Spend a winter in New England, and tell me if you feel the same way.![]()
Thats why we stay out in caliThats why we stay out in cali
But again, Im not talking about extreme, 10 feet of snow falling out the crack of ya ass weather. Just reasonably cooler weather. You can get more done and be more comfortable doing it, then weather that is hotter/warmer than normal.
Well, all of us complaining in this thread about how cold it is aren't talking about 'reasonably cooler weather'.
I guess you didnt really read my first post then.
I dont give a fck what ya'll are complaining about. Thats why I dont live in an ass cold area in the first place.
