I am from Eastern Europe and this is the hottest summer on my memory. For at least 3 consecutive years the heat is breaking all records.

This stuff is unbearable, I can’t even play video games on my laptop, because it warms up very fast and the keyboard becomes uncomfortable for me to use.

So, could you please share any useful tips on how do you survive the summer?

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25 points

Have central air conditioning in all buildings.

Have a place to swim.

I’m in the US and it was 40C (104F) yesterday, which is normal for my area. I spent the whole day either indoors or in the neighborhood pool, and it was perfectly comfortable.

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44 points

Soon people are going to be working in pools. Working from Pool (WFP) becomes the norm because of the heat.

Soon we will evolve to go back in the water. Water levels rise.

Years pass, emissions go down, we evolve to go back onto the land.

The cycle repeats.

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3 points

Soon we will evolve to go back in the water. Water levels rise.

Two drifters meet. Something needs to be exchanged.

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1 point

this is underground morlock burrow erasure

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11 points

Both AC and pools have a horrible upkeep cost.

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11 points

So does winter heating.

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6 points

Unlike winter heating, at least you can power the AC by the very sun that burns on your roof.

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2 points

Thats why I wear jackets indoors

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4 points

I mean, I bought my window ac at least 10 years ago, the only upkeep is cleaning the filter. no issues. I bought a house with an AC from the 70s or 80s in the wall, also nothing but washing the filters. Sure I’m using electricity, but I wouldn’t call that upkeep.

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18 points

Pretty sure that’s what that commenter meant. Running AC is a huge energy expenditure and is contributing to the long-term problem.

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8 points

The price of electricity in my country (the UK) has gone stupid high right now. We don’t have AC in our homes normally in the country. But I bought a 2nd hand portable unit about 7 years ago when my first son was born cos I was afraid of him gettin too hot at night. I have a 2nd son now and we have had some record high temps last month and o could only afford yo keep this AC unit on for a like 2 to 3 hours at night time in just his room and only on the hottest days. Anymore than that and we woild struggle to pay the energy bill that follows.

It’s not maintenance cost that’s the issue. It’s energy cost.

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2 points

We bought a cheap above ground pool that we put out in the summer. It helps that we have super cheap abundant supply of water.

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3 points

In a lot of hot weather countries people don’t have air-conditioning. 40C is also not comfortable in the slightest when the humidity is 90 percent.

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5 points

I agree. I have lived in hot, humid places without air conditioning. The only solution is to find cool places (in the shade, in a cellar), stay wet, drink lots of water, and avoid physical exertion until the sun goes down.

I am spoiled now. I live in a region with cheap, low-carbon electricity (almost entirely from hydro, nuclear, and wind) and modern infrastructure, so air conditioning is standard practice. I wish the whole world could have the same.

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1 point

No where on earth is it 40c at 90% humidity, that is explicitly deadly and quickly.

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2 points

Where I live it is that hot and that humid, but not at the same time. In the morning we will have 95% humidity at 80°F (26.5°C). But later in the day, when it is 104°F (40°C), the humidity usually drops to 40% or lower.

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2 points

It’s not always, but from where I live (a place beside the sea), humidity is always high, and we had multiple days of 40 degrees last year.

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2 points

Most of the world does not have central heat and central air.

In many areas, pools can be difficult due to a number of economic, social, and other factors.

Additionally, running AC constantly also puts more heat outside and, depending upon your power source, increases emissions further contributing to global climate issues just making things worse.

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