Some people feel cold and others don’t because their bodies keep heat better, like having a warm blanket or a cozy fire inside them.
Imagine your body is like a house. When it’s cold outside, the house loses warmth. If the walls are thin, the cold slips in fast. That's like someone who feels cold quickly, their body lets the cold in easy.
But if the walls are thick and there’s a big fire in the middle of the room, the house stays warm even when it snows outside. That’s like someone who doesn’t feel cold, their body holds heat better, like having a big fire inside.
How Bodies Keep Heat
Some people have strong heaters (like a furnace) that work hard to keep them warm. Others might have smaller heaters or ones that don’t run as fast.
Also, some people wear more clothes or move around more, both help keep heat in and cold out, like adding extra blankets or running around the house to stay lively!
Examples
- A child runs outside in the snow without a jacket, while their parent wears thick clothes and still feels chilly.
- Two people sit together in a cold room, but one is comfortable and the other is freezing.
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See also
- Why Do Humans Get Cold So Easily?
- How Does the Human Body Regulate Body Temperature?
- Why Do Humans Get Cold Soaked?
- How Does The Critical Role of Low Body Temperature in Fatigue Work?
- How do GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic affect metabolism?