It's called sensitivity. Everybody feels the effects of heat differently.There's also the fact that external temperatures affect your core temperature. You go outside in weather that's hotter than your core and you're going to start warming up a bit until you can cool off.
Quote from: on September 11, 2015, 12:57:42 PMIt's called sensitivity. Everybody feels the effects of heat differently.There's also the fact that external temperatures affect your core temperature. You go outside in weather that's hotter than your core and you're going to start warming up a bit until you can cool off.90 degrees is not hotter than your core temperature, it's actually less. so wouldn't it feel cold?
I think it goes like this: Your body generates heat that dissipates much easier at lower temperatures. It's also important to note that your core temperature is something like ninety-eight degrees, but your skin temperature isn't. That's about fifteen degrees cooler, on average (If I remember this right). Anyway, heat can only move from hotter to cooler environments, so when your body temperature and the outside temperature are the same, the excess heat that your body generates doesn't really have anywhere to go.
Your skin isn't 95+ degrees, you fucktard. your internal temp is.