In winter, anthroheat is a mercy. Packed into a bar after a freeze, you shed your coat and watch the windows fog from the inside. The room smells of wool, coffee, and the faint electrical tinge of too many people thinking at once. You lean into it—not the heat of fire, but the heat of presence. Of elbows brushing. Of whispered apologies and shared laughter that raises the room another half-degree.
And when they leave, the room goes cold in a way no wind ever could. anthroheat
Anthroheat is what happens when bodies remember they are animals—social, fragile, electric. It cannot be generated artificially. It can only be borrowed, for a while, from the people who press against you in the dark. In winter, anthroheat is a mercy