There seems to be a lot of it about.
Jan. 15th, 2009 10:19 pmI have a theory that just about everyone I know seems to be depressed at the moment, and I think it's because it's got to the point in the year where it's been winter for so long that it's like it's never going to end, and we all feel like crap due to lack of daylight. However, I realise that it is not winter for everyone in the world, and that some people are probably enjoying some lovely sunshine right now (the lucky sods!).
So here is a totally unscientific livejournal poll on the topic. I wish it was possible to write livejournal polls that link together the answers from multiple questions and correlate the answers automatically. Oh well. Question 2 is deliberately vague because I set about writing time intervals like "2-3 days ago" and "4-7 days ago" before realising that I couldn't remember the answer to it that precisely myself, so it was probably pointless expecting anyone else to.
[Poll #1331853]
Oh yes, and if you do happen to feel just great at the moment, then please comment below to say why, because the rest of us need cheering up.
So here is a totally unscientific livejournal poll on the topic. I wish it was possible to write livejournal polls that link together the answers from multiple questions and correlate the answers automatically. Oh well. Question 2 is deliberately vague because I set about writing time intervals like "2-3 days ago" and "4-7 days ago" before realising that I couldn't remember the answer to it that precisely myself, so it was probably pointless expecting anyone else to.
[Poll #1331853]
Oh yes, and if you do happen to feel just great at the moment, then please comment below to say why, because the rest of us need cheering up.
Re: Feeling Good
Date: 2009-01-22 12:48 am (UTC)High-grade CO poisoning kills you in your sleep, but low-grade CO poisoning shows up as tiredness, dizziness, headaches and fluish symptoms that go on and on. These seem to be rather similar to what you've been complaining about, and of course it's much more common in winter when we run the heating.
I personally think it would be reasonable to get your TSH level tested annually if you aren't quite right but the previous test was happily within the range of normal; and more regularly if you had a high result previously. But I Am Not A Doctor.