Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get proper clothes. Merino wool, real shearling, and silk baselayers are your friend. Then if you’re still cold one of the rechargeable heated vests.
Children need to play outside every day unless the weather makes that actually dangerous (sleet, rain heavy enough to make equipment slippery). If you truly can’t or won’t provide that, pay someone to do it.
Did you go to the park every day when you were a kid? I truly can’t believe the amount of pressure parents put on themselves today. Many Parents have other things to do in a day and don’t have hours to spend at a playground. It’s truly unbelievable.
I take my kid to a park sometimes. Sometimes I don’t. And I feel zero guilt.
Everyone needs to get outside every day. PP didn’t say to a park, just getting outside. Go for a walk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get proper clothes. Merino wool, real shearling, and silk baselayers are your friend. Then if you’re still cold one of the rechargeable heated vests.
Children need to play outside every day unless the weather makes that actually dangerous (sleet, rain heavy enough to make equipment slippery). If you truly can’t or won’t provide that, pay someone to do it.
Did you go to the park every day when you were a kid? I truly can’t believe the amount of pressure parents put on themselves today. Many Parents have other things to do in a day and don’t have hours to spend at a playground. It’s truly unbelievable.
I take my kid to a park sometimes. Sometimes I don’t. And I feel zero guilt.
Anonymous wrote:Daily outside time is really important so yes I suck it up. I wear layers. I walk around a lot. I also try to do stuff that keeps us all moving, like walking to a park or the library or a hike because standing there is much colder.
Anonymous wrote:Get proper clothes. Merino wool, real shearling, and silk baselayers are your friend. Then if you’re still cold one of the rechargeable heated vests.
Children need to play outside every day unless the weather makes that actually dangerous (sleet, rain heavy enough to make equipment slippery). If you truly can’t or won’t provide that, pay someone to do it.
Anonymous wrote:Not for the kids cus obviously they wear jackets etc…and I swear they are not as sensitive to cold as adults are. But for me, I HATE being cold and I run very cold. So being outside no matter how bundled up I am makes me miserable. My son would stay at a playground all day/everyday no matter the weather. He has recess during school days with a playground as long as the weather is above a certain degree. But for the weekends do you just grin and bear it? I mean it’s not like he never goes. He’s getting multiple days a week at the playground but I still find myself being guilty/but also dreading being cold.
Anonymous wrote:You just need better gear. There’s absolutely no reason you need to feel cold standing around above 25 degrees.
Get big winter boots and thick wool socks.
Get a long, very warm coat.
Get a close fitting wool hat, warm mittens, and a scarf.
Done! Seriously it’s not that cold here. You should be comfortable standing around for hours if you’re wearing adequate winter gear. Comfortable meaning not cold at all.
Anonymous wrote:I go out in two layers of long underwear, three wool sweaters, one short jacket, one floor-length hooded coat, electric hand warmers, wool socks, balaclava, hat, and two pars of mittens. This keeps me comfortable. It’s very important for all humans, especially children, to get hours and hours of outdoor exercise a day. If you’re not hitting 6-10 miles outside your health will suffer.