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Hot chocolate, woolly socks and a good book: why cosy living is good for you

When it’s dark and cold outside (not to mention existentially troubling), our sense of survival kicks in and we withdraw to that place we feel safest – home

This autumn, on the rare occasions I venture out, I’ve taken to looking back at my house. With warm yellow light radiating from the window, framed against the blue-black sky, the glow from the woodburning stove and my husband sitting in the ragged red and pink armchair, happily absorbed in a book (OK, usually his phone), it just looks so cosy.

Who doesn’t love cosy? It’s like loving puppies, or presents. Even the young – who are supposed to be out with no coat in all weathers, wreaking enjoyable havoc – have embraced it. There are 5.4bn views for #cozy on TikTok, where they’re dressing like chic grandmothers and doing “cozycardio” workouts. But we’re all fully paid-up members of the cult of cosy; we’ve got, not the T-shirt, but the chunky knit, the slipper socks and the Richard Osman novel. How did cosy become our dominant aesthetic, one of our most enduring pleasures, and why?

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