Is it normal that the sun causes breathing issues?
Whenever the sun is out and it's a hot day (it's 78 F right now, not cloudy) (Regardless of the UV) if I'm in the direct sun, it hurts my chest and I struggle to breathe.
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Whenever the sun is out and it's a hot day (it's 78 F right now, not cloudy) (Regardless of the UV) if I'm in the direct sun, it hurts my chest and I struggle to breathe.
It is not the Sun that makes it hard to breathe. It is the humidity, the ozone and other airborne pollutants that makes it hard to breathe.
The Sun, however, can cause serious DNA and brain-damage, which is permanent and irreversible; since the world's protective geomagnetic field is weakening at an accelerated rate.
The geomagnetic field normally partially protects us from harmful heavy particles (protons and electrons) that are emitted from the Sun, as well as some harmful wavelengths of photonic (electromagnetic) energy.
It's interesting that you mention these geomagnetic field effects as it might even be the actual cause of so called global warming. All those dynamics are very poorly understood and attributing GW to human activity is only politically motivated (have you not noticed how it's only leftists who are adamant on levying taxes to 'tackle' it?) without much evidence.
You might be partly correct there, but human-caused effects are also most certainly exacerbating the situation.
Certainly, it is causing mesospheric gravity wave propagations, which are being reported all over the world as causing 'seneca booms' and abnormal 'vibrations' and 'shaking'.