2017-08-15 at 12:04 AM UTC
I feel drained of energy often, with small nausea. I was think low blood sugar but i still get it when i've had sugar in coffee earlier. Maybe its cause i have t eaten ?
2017-08-15 at 12:13 AM UTC
DocFoster
Tuskegee Airman
[concentrate my unpalatable boomer]
Could be. Also could be a fucked sleep schedule. Caffiene, I hear, just helps temporarily. You'll be addicted and develop a tolerance,so I hear
2017-08-15 at 12:19 AM UTC
This is exactly what I'm talking about. You really think the reason you feel like shit is because you have "chronic fatigue syndrome" and not because you're an out of shape alcoholic that sits on the internet all the time?
2017-08-15 at 12:21 AM UTC
Yo fake some fibromyalgia too and you have a recipe for lots of free money from the government for LIFE
2017-08-15 at 12:31 AM UTC
All's I'm doing is hypothesizing about why I sometimes feel drained of energy, not playing a disability card.
2017-08-15 at 12:34 AM UTC
It certainly is a real thing. I had a period of time where I was in very good shape, eating healthy, active, sober, etc., and I suddenly found myself unable to do hardly anything, getting out of bed felt almost impossible, my motivation just dropped off, and there was no good explanation for any of it. I was never diagnosed with some fatigue syndrome but I still don't know what caused it. I had blood work done and my levels were all normal. It sucked ass though, I can tell you that.
2017-08-15 at 1:07 AM UTC
One of my old best friends claimed to have it as did my sister when she was younger, so I'm familiar with people making it up as an excuse not to do things.
Neither had anything wrong with them except from being incredibly selfish and lazy people
2017-08-15 at 1:11 AM UTC
It could be anemia or hypothyroidism. But like greenplastic said, it's usually likely to be diet, lack of exercise, and drinking. Alcohol has a pretty strong effect on this sort of thing that I've heard a few regular drinkers say they never realized that was it until they stopped drinking. Even though it could be one of the two conditions I mentioned, any decent doctor (which most of them aren't) would want you to try a better diet and exercise first if your blood levels don't come back with low iron or whatever it is that indicates thyroid issues.
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2017-08-15 at 1:20 AM UTC
I actually don't drink that much anymore, like once in 10 days, or even once a month sometimes.
2017-08-15 at 1:39 AM UTC
-SpectraL
coward
[the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
The scientific term is "laziness".