| <I want good reasons to make it worth living in a sauna!!!> 
 Well 
air-conditioning is almost a requirement, both in your house and your car, 
and you you'll have very few heat issues except those while walking from 
your house to your car.
 
 I'm a native to the state, so the heat 
doesn't bother me. For all the transplants (as most of them are), I've 
heard varying reasons for why they've moved here.
 
 There's no 
snow in the Phoenix (well, maybe 1/100th of an inch every decade), and 
sunshine almost all year long. There are only a few months out of the year 
where the high temperature is over 100. Most of the rest of the year, we 
enjoy day and evening temperatures from 50-80 while the rest of the country 
is shoveling snow.
 
 On the other hand, if you like the cooler 
weather, there's Flagstaff and other parts of Northern Arizona
 . Once you've gone 
up to the Mogollon Rim (about 5,000 feet elevation on up), you can get 
all the snow you want in the winter time, and enjoy summer weather in the 
mid-80s. So there are varying climates.. below zero to 120+ :-).| Arizona | (air-i'-ZON-u') |  | The State of Arizona comprises the extreme south-western portion of the United States. It is bounded on the north by Utah, on the east by New Mexico, on the south by Mexico, and on the west by California and Nevada. | 
 
 Other 
reasons I've heard include the fact that Phoenix builds "out" instead of 
"up", as opposed to New York or Chicago. So you don't have millions of 
people compacted into a small area, yet you still have the availability 
of all your normal living amenities. Then there are some really wealthy 
areas like Scottsdale, Ahwatukee, and Sedona that make you forget about 
the heat.
 
 It's interesting though.. the number one reason I 
hear that people move here is the same as the number one complaint I hear 
from summer visitors.. the weather.
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