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Not. If we do not heat it's cold and the temp drops. How cold it will be depends on the temp outside and inside. If no sun inside it only gets colder.
My bedroom for example is rather cold. About fridge temp even if it's 30°C outside.
Last winter I decided tonkeep the doir clised to keep out the worst cold.

There's no heater nor wood stove.
The only one is in what we use for a kitchen. That one should keep the place warm (warm as in as warm as possible which is impossible due to the shape of the house).

So around 2 p.m. I start the fire. With some luck it's warm before the children are back home. I keep it on till we go tp bed which is early in winter (plus it's out at 5 am to be at school at 8 am).
So children have hopefully a day with warmth at school (or bus) I stay in the cold till 2 am (or try).
We mostly feel cold and no we don't get used to it (if that would be true it would be so much easier).

Out if experience I know February is the coldest month so I calculate how much I can use per day and hope not to heat before December (nirmal is to start now).

It certainly takes a lot of work to keep a house warm. If I travel to a colder place, I want to skip the shower altogether, as that moment of stepping out is always the coldest. It's funny how we're doing the exact opposite thing from two different parts of the world: I'm constantly trying to keep the heat out, while you're constantly trying to keep it in.

I agree that taking a shower is a challange if it's in a cold environment. 🥶

The only plus might be we rarely have the flu. Rare as once in 10 if not 20 years or more.
But therefore we struggle with headslaches caused by the coldvand frozen ties/feet and fingers not to mention the ear pain.
Since it's sunny, I get ready to go outside 😁, free vitamin D is the best.

♥️🍀