It’s also amazing how literal people are. Of course no one “freezes”. However, we choose not to be uncomfortable in our own home or wear coats and long underwear in our house. People have different thresholds but the 60’s inside are not comfortable for us. |
+1 to 68 during day, 64-66 at night. I’d feel like I was suffocating at 72. |
You need to wear long underwear if the house is 65 degrees?! It was a gorgeous day today - afternoon his 62. Did you wear a puffer coat in the afternoon? |
You need king underwear to go below 70? Do you at least wear socks and long sleeves in the winter? |
Use the programs in the thermostat. After 8pm the temp should be set at 65-68 range. Also get a temp measure thing ($10 at amazon) and put it near your side of the bed. It may be 70-71 in the bedroom since it is upstairs and heat rises.
My upstairs is 2-3 degree higher than main level. Therefore, I set the temp at 66 and the bedrooms are 70. During the day is a matter of preference, 68-70 should be sufficient. |
Check your house humidity levels. Heating to 72 could be making it 25-30% humidity, which would wreck my dry skin. |
We keep ours at 74-75 all winter. I’m moving to Florida as soon as I retire. |
Says the person who probably blasts the AC in summer. |
Agreed! |
NP. I keep the house at the same temperatures. In summer it's 77/72. Not too chilly, not uncomfortably warm. It's normal and natural to adjust things for the seasons. 72 is ridiculous for the winter, especially at night. Good lord. |
72?! |
72 is outrageous and what my grandparents used to keep the house at back in the day. |
Is it just me, or are OP and her DH remarkably stupid? Did one really think that the temp should be 72 all day and all night, and the other really think the heat should be entirely off and night, and neither realized that they can and should lower the thermostat? WTF. And OP has friends who keep their house in the upper 70s? Unless OP is more than 80 years old, I find all this very hard to believe. The most charitable explanation I can come up with is that OP recently moved to the U.S. after living her whole lives somewhere tropical or sub-Saharan and relatively poor, so they didn't have experience with climate control. But still ... what the DH? And look at the thermostat? And have a conversation? And think about it? My mind is boggled. |
68 at night and while no one is home, 70 during day when home and awake. Perfect compromise. |
We do 66 at night and 69 during the day. If individual people are too hot or too cold, they can (1) add or remove clothes; (2) add or remove blankets; (3) use a fan or space heater. |