And when they leave, the room goes cold in a way no wind ever could.
At home, alone, you sometimes miss it. You turn your space heater on and point it at an empty chair. The air warms, but there’s no breath in it. No heartbeat. anthroheat
But anthroheat can turn. In August, in a protest line or a concert pit, it becomes a pressure. A warning. Sweat slips down ribs. Tempers rise not from anger alone, but from the sheer, unavoidable nearness of other lives. You feel your pulse sync with the stranger beside you, and for a terrible moment, you cannot tell if the heat is love or threat. And when they leave, the room goes cold