Edit: Context behind this question is because my parents always tell me to shut the windows all the way and I kinda feel like I’m suffocating… literally… (it’s Winter here)

Like I just struggle to breathe with windows closed…

So I’m just curious, how do y’all not suffocate while trying to keep house warm and spend less on heating?

  • underscores@lemmy.zip
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    6 小时前

    I open the windows during winter even when it’s like -30c, at some point the air gets stale and circulation is needed. The stuffy air also makes my headspace feel weird, like something is irritating me but I can’t tell what it is.

    Then at some point I open the windows, I also runna huge flan to circulate air around.

  • Ryanmiller70@lemmy.zip
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    4 小时前

    I rarely ever open windows unless someone asks me to. I get a lot of complaints during the summer of how hot it is indoors, but I adore the heat.

  • scoobford@piefed.blahaj.zone
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    6 小时前

    My building is on an old chiller system, so my AC is off ~5 months out of the year. My windows are open the entire time, and I usually have fans set up too to try and keep things cool.

    When my AC is on, absolutely never. It is hot here like 7 months out of the year.

  • MysteriousB@piefed.social
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    7 小时前

    Spain, in winter at least 15 minutes in the morning after waking up and 15 minutes in the evening. In Summer I try not to open the windows during the day only at night because I will be naked alive otherwise

  • Gammelfisch@lemmy.world
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    17 小时前

    When we taste the air is a bit a stale, we open the all the windows and sliding doors to exchange the air during all seasons.

    • bad neighborhood

      I remember when I was in China we used to have 防盗网 (“Anti-Theft Nets”) all over our windows… I mean it also prevents us kids from falling out of windows I guess.

      I remember my old apartment in Guangzhou, there was a sofa next the the window, the TV is on the opposide of the sofa. And behind the sofa was the window, that looked down straight to the alleyway (not a street, cars can’t get in, the main road is like 10-20 minutes of walking distance away)…

      Like sometimes as kids you play around and climb the sofa and then the top of the sofa (like the thing where you lean you back against) is the same height of the window.

      So you could accidentally play around and if the window was open, you could, you know how kids be, peek out the window out of curiousity and fall out and die.

      Like the only thing standing in the way is the Anti-Theft Net thingy.

      This is what it looks like (random image found online):

      I was always told to “be careful or you can fall out of there and DIE” and jeez… kid-me got so terrified of heights.

      The stairs also have a bare-minimum concrete/cement barrier, you can get drunk, accidentally hop over it, and fall down to your death…

      Come to think of it you could literally murder someone and pretend they accidentally fell. (Russian Dissidents have joined the chat 👀)

      I remember when I visited one of my aunts apartment… it was like 16 floors high in the middle of Manhattan… OMG I got so scared… but I wanna look outside the window but I immediately just feel like I have a panic attack like “OMG what if I fall out?”…

      I remember having a sleepover there with my family and literally every moment awake I was like Window = Scary

      But yea I asked my parents “why not install those like we had in China”, but apparantly most cities in the US have city ordinances against these things, you need a permit for it… and then since it’s not the norm in the US, you’d just get targeted since people would think: “Ooh they must be rich / hiding a lot of valuables” so yea we don’t have those anti-theft nets here in the US.

  • Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de
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    18 小时前

    I got a Technoline WL1030 meter for my room and whenever it reaches 1500 ppm CO2 I open the window until its back down below about 600-700, then I close it to not waste more heat than necessary

    Edit: To give some more context, my room is 14 m^2 and about 2.50m high so roughly 35 m^3 of air minus some occupied by furniture call it 30 m^3 maybe. It is a modern house with good insulation and energy retention rating (built to the “Minergie” standard we have here in Switzerland), but without forced air, so not much air is exchanged when the windows are closed. With this I end up roughly having to exchange the air every three hours or so.

    • emigu@lemmy.world
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      1 天前

      As a foreigner living in Germany, I just knew this would be the main response. Germans LOVE to air out rooms

    • Yosmonkol@piefed.social
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      1 天前

      How old is stoßlüften? I know people that are always opening windows and telling their kids to go outside to “blow the stink off” and while they have german ancestry it would be from over a hundred years ago.

      • Miles O'Brien@startrek.website
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        1 天前

        Lpt: if your residence has central heating/ac and was made within the last 50 years then your house is probably getting sufficient airflow.

        • Central heating, no AC.

          Heat is not carried by air, but by those pipes with hot water running to radiators… so I don’t know if there’s any airflow.

          Built before 1978, might have lead paint under there… but it was painted over once before we moved in so its probably lead safe(? I hope lol, i’d be lame to lose a few iq points to something stupid like lead)

          • Miles O'Brien@startrek.website
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            22 小时前

            Ah, then no forced air through ventilation ducts to move air around.

            My current house doesn’t have vents either, but I have fans that move air around the important bits that get occupied the most. With my dogs needing to go out, and work, the doors are open enough, and there’s enough leakage to not worry about co2 levels. Except my wife sometimes trips the sensor in the hallway when she takes a long bath while burning multiple candles…

    • snoons@lemmy.ca
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      1 天前

      I try to open my bedroom window as little as possible because the air outside is usually poor quality and I have an active air filter monitoring my room and removing crud from it. I LOVE living in a car centric city in a country who’s government has been partly captured by oil companies and dealerships at all levels.

      I like to think the plants I have in my room help with the CO₂, but I don’t feel they make that much of a difference.

    • starlinguk@lemmy.world
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      1 天前

      Sadly my upstairs and downstairs neighbours are chain smokers. They close their windows and the balcony doors and I get all the (pot) smoke. Why does Germany have so many smokers?

  • RisingSwell@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    18 小时前

    Rarely, I just have my AC on to make it hot or cold and the solar panels make it almost free.

    Window open means bugs get in, and they tend to like lights like my computer screen and I’m sick of cleaning bug goo off the screen.

  • 87Six@lemmy.zip
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    16 小时前

    I find that I need to open them 2-3 times a day.

    I open them when humidity goes above 60% in my room, and keep it open until it reaches under 50.

    This usually means opening them 2-3 times daily.

    Otherwise I get the same suffocating feeling.

    This definitely varies by region.

  • AstroLightz@lemmy.world
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    23 小时前

    I never open Windows regardless of season.

    I like the fresh scent of Mint in my house instead.

  • Kissaki@feddit.org
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    23 小时前

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/HNq-De_wCx0

    In the winter, Stoßlüften, especially to get moisture out in winter, to reduce and clear out condensed water on windows and prevent mold. I guess bathroom after a shower more than other rooms either way. In the summer, full night, none during the day.

    Sometimes not for a few days, sometimes multiple times a day, sometimes open all day. Depends on the season and a few other things.