I served 20 years in the US Navy as a nuclear engineer. Most of my career was spent in the engineering spaces of aircraft carriers. The hottest I've ever seen on a thermometer down there was 160F; that was in the main feed booster pump flats aboard Big E, which was a notorious steam bath of a ship. On a Nimitz class, Feed Control Room temps in the Persian Gulf could easily hit 120F or even 130F. So yeah, I am very familiar with what heat can do to unprepared people.
Conversely, I experienced -50F during an Arctic Circle crossing up by Norway; so cold that you can actually feel your life leaving your body.
Needless to say, because of these experiences, I have different definitions and tolerances of "hot" and "cold" than most people.
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Be careful what you wish for. I might let you have it.