treeguy64
Hari Om, y'all!
- Location
- Austin, TX.
Hi, y'all! I'm doing some personal research, here. I'd like to know if any of you are subject to very intense chills. For most of my life, I've dealt with the chills. They come on almost out of nowhere, and incapacitate me to the point where I can't talk and barely can move.
In my young boy and teen days, I'd get them outside, due to poor choices in clothing in chilly Illinois nights. As I got older I found various triggers: I can never swim after the sun is down: Instant chills as soon as I hit the water, even in a heated pool.
I only get the chills at home, now, in my bed, if I leave an arm out of the covers and then flip it around in a dream. I wake up thinking, "Oh no, not again!" and then they start up. I have gotten the chills even in a room showing 72°. Bummer. I am 5'10", 153 lbs., with a BMI of around 10%. I'm vegan. I stay too active to put on weight, and in my business, a meaty climber is a poor one, usually. I have to add that sometimes I get a fever of 100.4°F, most times not. In my youth, my chills would abate after I threw up. Nowadays, they simply taper off, no bag needed. Great, right?
So, what are your chills stories and suggestions? I do not want to be tested by an MD, since I've had this malady my whole life, and I'm pretty used to it.
Just writing all of the above has made my chills go away. Thanks! (Yes, I know that there is a good chance that my chills have a psychological component.)
In my young boy and teen days, I'd get them outside, due to poor choices in clothing in chilly Illinois nights. As I got older I found various triggers: I can never swim after the sun is down: Instant chills as soon as I hit the water, even in a heated pool.
I only get the chills at home, now, in my bed, if I leave an arm out of the covers and then flip it around in a dream. I wake up thinking, "Oh no, not again!" and then they start up. I have gotten the chills even in a room showing 72°. Bummer. I am 5'10", 153 lbs., with a BMI of around 10%. I'm vegan. I stay too active to put on weight, and in my business, a meaty climber is a poor one, usually. I have to add that sometimes I get a fever of 100.4°F, most times not. In my youth, my chills would abate after I threw up. Nowadays, they simply taper off, no bag needed. Great, right?
So, what are your chills stories and suggestions? I do not want to be tested by an MD, since I've had this malady my whole life, and I'm pretty used to it.
Just writing all of the above has made my chills go away. Thanks! (Yes, I know that there is a good chance that my chills have a psychological component.)