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Re: Heat Waves

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Cyn,

I KNOW what heat waves are...I have them constantly.

My neck becomes warm and it starts to travel up through my face and into my

head...the higher it goes, the hotter it gets. I had a complete hysterectomy 3

years ago. I stopped using the estrogen patch around 9 months ago because of

the side effects.

I don't know if what I am having is menopause or fibro, but it's a horrible

feeling. I now sleep with a fan aimed right on my face/head. It has really

helped with the sweating.

Kay

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I've never been able to understand why we alway seem to accommodate

those that are cold instead of those that are warm. Common sense

dictates that a cold person can put on some extra clothing to keep

warm. However a warm person (after all the clothes are off) cannot

remove their skin to cool off. I say... heck with the cold ones and use

some common sense... Bring her a sweater to wear and turn the A/C on

high. I have a saying that may offend some... but.... " Here's a

sweater, put it on, shut up, I'm sick, so buzz off and eat more...

sheesh " . :-) Aren't I mean? hehehehe.

hot hugs,

Norah

Norah Bleazard - Burlington, Ontario Canada

www.bleazard.net ~ www.janorlites.com

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wrote:

>That's what mine are like. They usually happen at work because we

>don't keep the office as cool as I do at home, the girl I work with is

>really thin and freezes if we keep it comfortable in there LOL For

>me, they usually hit when I am already a little warm, then all of a

>sudden I feel like I am standing in a furnace and just burning up. It

>seems that it is very, very hard for me to get my body temperature

>back to normal after the episodes also.

>

>

>

>

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LOL well that would be one solution but it would probably get me fired

by the boss lol But thanks for the laugh Norah

heck with the cold ones and use

> some common sense... Bring her a sweater to wear and turn the A/C on

> high. I have a saying that may offend some... but.... " Here's a

> sweater, put it on, shut up, I'm sick, so buzz off and eat more...

> sheesh " . :-) Aren't I mean? hehehehe.

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Im in early menopause and I know my sweating is from

that, I never had sweating with my fibro before, so

its all a new thing for me lately. Today I felt like

im sweating on the inside of my skin, yuck, I dont

like it at all.

Deb

--- mozart1143@... wrote:

---------------------------------

Cyn,

I KNOW what heat waves are...I have them constantly.

My neck becomes warm and it starts to travel up

through my face and into my

head...the higher it goes, the hotter it gets. I had a

complete hysterectomy 3

years ago. I stopped using the estrogen patch around 9

months ago because of

the side effects.

I don't know if what I am having is menopause or

fibro, but it's a horrible

feeling. I now sleep with a fan aimed right on my

face/head. It has really

helped with the sweating.

Kay

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That was the only one I've ever had, and it happened about 5 years ago. It

embarrassed me, because the shop-keepers wanted to call an ambulance and I

kept telling them I was fine, I just needed to sit down. I was wondering if

it was maybe menopause starting, but I've had many hormonal tests over the

years, and have just started pre-menopause. I still am regular as

clockwork, but my rheumatologist told me I had some hormonal problems in my

last test. I'd taken one of those pre-menopause home tests a couple of

months before, and they came out positive, so I knew I was in the early

phase, but I haven't had any problems with that. And the fibro symptoms

started when I was very young, so I know it's not just hormonal " problems "

that are causing my symptoms.

The rheumatologist wanted to treat me with hormones, but they make me

violently ill, very similar to morning sickness. When I was pregnant I was

sick all day & night long the entire pregnancy (from 4 weeks on). Before I

became pregnant with my first child I weighed 119 lbs, and the day he was

born I weighed 117 lbs. My second pregnancy I was so sick I went down to 82

lbs. I don't know how I carried on as a wife and mother, but I managed. I

was even sicker with my daughter, and the doctor wanted to do a

" therapeutic abortion " , but I refused.

Besides the nausea, my body ached all over, especially my pelvic girdle. I

had to sleep on the couch in the later months, and when I tried to turn

over I could feel my pelvic bones rub together....ugh!!! I remember waking

up one morning just wishing the pregnancy would be over, I was in my 8th

month. I sat and finished the pink blanket I was knitting (I just knew it

would be a girl). and later that afternoon, around 3:30, I was cleaning up

after lunch and my water burst. I called my husband at work (he'd just

gotten back from lunch) and he took me to the doctor. The doctor said I was

4 cm dilated and to get right to the hospital, which was across the street.

The nicest thing was, they let me take a shower when I got there, so I felt

all clean and refreshed. The labor was really fast, and by 6:30 I was

holding my 5 lb 9 0z baby girl. They put her in an incubator overnight, but

the doctor said she was fine to go home the next morning. I never did get

over all those aches and pains, though, and I now know why, lol!

cyn

At 11:40 PM 7/18/2004 +0000, wrote:

>That's what mine are like. They usually happen at work because we

>don't keep the office as cool as I do at home, the girl I work with is

> really thin and freezes if we keep it comfortable in there LOL For

>me, they usually hit when I am already a little warm, then all of a

>sudden I feel like I am standing in a furnace and just burning up. It

>seems that it is very, very hard for me to get my body temperature

>back to normal after the episodes also.

>

>

cyn

clmerritt@...

Time.....time ....time is what turns kittens into cats

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