Or a pre-school or kindergym or (if a building design is opulent enough to offer room-specific temperature control) a two-year-old’s bedroom?
Small bodies have much higher surface area to volume ratios, and a 10 month old can barely even explain the problem they face!
In grocery stores when I was really little, I’d stay “just outside” the cold aisle, and then run to the other end to try to avoid the chill, when along with parents on a shopping trip who wanted to loiter in the middle of it. It was only much later that I understood the physics of why they weren’t bothered, and the psycho-politics of why no one optimized that stuff “for me”.
I just don’t remember ever minding cold as a child. Yes, I would run through the freezer isle, or jump around to keep my feet off the ground and to stay warm, but I would enjoy the running, it would fully address the problem for me. With pre-school kids, I feel like they’re always moving around a lot in this way, but I’m not sure.
Or a pre-school or kindergym or (if a building design is opulent enough to offer room-specific temperature control) a two-year-old’s bedroom?
Small bodies have much higher surface area to volume ratios, and a 10 month old can barely even explain the problem they face!
In grocery stores when I was really little, I’d stay “just outside” the cold aisle, and then run to the other end to try to avoid the chill, when along with parents on a shopping trip who wanted to loiter in the middle of it. It was only much later that I understood the physics of why they weren’t bothered, and the psycho-politics of why no one optimized that stuff “for me”.
I just don’t remember ever minding cold as a child. Yes, I would run through the freezer isle, or jump around to keep my feet off the ground and to stay warm, but I would enjoy the running, it would fully address the problem for me. With pre-school kids, I feel like they’re always moving around a lot in this way, but I’m not sure.