MissMolly
Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2010
- Messages
- 2,145
Cut her some slack. Anybody with a fever of 130+ is going to make some typos
Cut her some slack. Anybody with a fever of 130+ is going to make some typos
That’s interesting! Can’t imagine the story there. Does the virus like higher blood sugar?
one of my biggest challenges has been insomnia (right when i need rest to combat pneumonia!) -- i have been taking melatonin and benadryl (not ideal as it dries me out)...my wife loves 'Rescue Remedy' for stress - it's from flower extracts of some kind. I used to roll my eyes when she would mention it, but I took some last night and i think it really helped me relax and fall asleep earlier than recent normal.
She buys it at Wholefoods, but I suspect places like walgreens might have it.
I'm feeling better this morning than yesterday. I get up at 5 pretty much every day, and it's about 7:30, and now I'm just beginning to feel chills. Ugh! Temp 100.5. Oximeter good.
I can recommend "ZZZ-Quil" (or a generic equivalent) when you need to sleep - it's got the sleep inducing diphenhydramine the way Benadryl does, but not the rest of the stuff that makes me a bit wingy. My dentist suggested it when I was going through one of my (many!) bad tooth times. I use it only when I really need it so I don't get used to it and it loses it's punch. It sure came in handy the last couple of years of wo*k (smile!)
Thanks! I'll start looking around...Did you know the "Quills" contain high fructose corn syrup and a bunch of Tylenol among other things? I'd be very careful dosing with this during covid. You can buy all the parts of the Quills as stand alone and I think that would a lot better way to take them. and then you aren't drinking sugar...
I'm feeling better this morning than yesterday. I get up at 5 pretty much every day, and it's about 7:30, and now I'm just beginning to feel chills. Ugh! Temp 100.5. Oximeter good.
I can recommend "ZZZ-Quil" (or a generic equivalent) when you need to sleep - it's got the sleep inducing diphenhydramine the way Benadryl does, but not the rest of the stuff that makes me a bit wingy. My dentist suggested it when I was going through one of my (many!) bad tooth times. I use it only when I really need it so I don't get used to it and it loses it's punch. It sure came in handy the last couple of years of wo*k (smile!)
That’s interesting! Can’t imagine the story there. Does the virus like higher blood sugar?
hang in there Cindy
I am being careful on what I am taking for sleep due to the pneumonia. We have valium, that I know would help me sleep...but that is a no-no with pneumonia. I read some on Benadryl and it didn't seem to have breathing supression issues like something like valium. Melatonin simply kicks in your time clock that it's time to sleep (no respiratory supression).
I am visiting my PCP Monday and he might have ideas on the insomnia for me...I'll pass them on after my visit.
hang in there Cindy
I am being careful on what I am taking for sleep due to the pneumonia. We have valium, that I know would help me sleep...but that is a no-no with pneumonia. I read some on Benadryl and it didn't seem to have breathing supression issues like something like valium. Melatonin simply kicks in your time clock that it's time to sleep (no respiratory supression).
I am visiting my PCP Monday and he might have ideas on the insomnia for me...I'll pass them on after my visit.
bobbyr - if you are more than a few weeks past onset. you might want to join one of the on-line long haul patient support groups. If you are interested, PM me and I will suggest a couple of the better ones.
You sound like us (grin!) Always looking for something to do!
I can't tell you how many people here said the same thing, us included - that they were worried about having nothing to do when they retired. I asked a lot of questions here on the forum and read a lot of posts from people who were worried about it before they retired, and wrote about it after they retired - and I can't remember anyone saying anything except how they can't believe they ever had time to work, they have so much to do now in retirement (smile!) And we found out that we feel the same way!
For us, the first year took care of "nothing to do" as we dealt with my dad and his wife and their Alzheimers and illnesses getting suddenly worse fast. Thank goodness we weren't working - the timing was so perfect! Dealing with her decline and death, his Alzheimer's and poor health and eventual placement into a nursing home, and then cleaning out their "hoarder's house" kept us very busy for over seven months. Then we put the property back together from long neglect - cutting trees, splitting wood, filling rock into eroded areas, mowing and mowing and mowing (smile!)
So really, the first "retirement period" for us has started about three months ago, when we "have nothing to do." And, of course, the pandemic has quashed any travel plans (smile!)
We both do better with a "schedule," with something to look forward to doing, so before we both got positive covid tests, we built a routine into our day. Every day, we take a sweet to my dad in his nursing home, about 20 miles away, then take a walk in a park or a neighborhood (we love looking at what people have done to their yards and getting ideas (smile!)). We volunteer one day a week at the local food bank. Hubby swims twice to three times a week. I finally have time to try all the crafts I've always wanted to. We do some work on the property almost every day, too (one of the best parts about retirement is, in most cases (except for emergencies, such as a leaky pipe) if we don't get it done today, we can do it tomorrow! We don't HAVE to get it done today because we have only today to get it done - yay!)
At the advice of so many people here, we didn't over schedule.
We are amazed and so grateful that we have time in the morning to just sit and have coffee and read the paper without having to rush (he used to leave the house at about 6AM every day (except for swimming days, then at 5:30) me at about 6:30.) And have time in the afternoon to sit outside all bundled up against the fall coolness for a couple of hours and watch the squirrels and the birds and the deer and the falling leaves, and read our books - such a luxury! And since we can't hang out with friends (except on Zoom!) we play cards or Parcheesi many afternoons (he is beating the crap out of me in both, but I will have a comeback soon (grin!))
Time to do all these things (from working on the property to reading, etc.) - to be able to make the CHOICE to do these things - is such an unbelievable luxury after a lifetime of fitting them in where we could. And make no mistake, we loved our jobs - it never felt like work (he taught high school for 51 years, I did for 41, and we both coached two seasons a year most years.) But we are cherishing every moment to CHOOSE what do to with our time (smile!)
I am looking forward to reading your posts a year from now (smile!)
I also learned during the course of my battle that eating anything with sugar in it dragged me down big time (pulse went up, o2 went down).
That’s interesting! Can’t imagine the story there. Does the virus like higher blood sugar?
The SARS-CoV-2 virus may become a sustained threat to global health. This review has described many of the molecular mechanisms through which an exogenous ketone-based metabolic therapy together with a moderately high-fat diet may stimulate host cell metabolism and defenses as a possible treatment to blunt the cytokine storm associated with severe SARS-CoV-2 infection. A clinical trial testing this therapy on patients with SARS-CoV-2 is warranted. In addition, further mouse IAV infection studies will aid in the determination of permissive dietary conditions under which exogenous ketone supplementation enhances immune function to facilitate viral clearance and decrease mortality.
I also remember an article from this spring about two regions in China having very different COVID outcome. They also had very different diets where the one doing better ate much less carbohydrates. But I cannot find the link - sorry. Anyone else remember this?
Restriction of dietary carbohydrates is a simple and safe intervention which results in rapid improvements in glycaemic control and can be implemented alongside usual care in a medical or domestic setting. While the pathophysiology of COVID-19 is multifactorial, insulin resistance is among the strongest determinants of impaired metabolic function. Since 88% of the US population is metabolically unhealthy, the extent to which it contributes to the severity of COVID-19 infection is likely to be significant.
Thanks much for that!Source: https://www.hindawi.com/journals/omcl/2020/6401341/The SARS-CoV-2 virus may become a sustained threat to global health. This review has described many of the molecular mechanisms through which an exogenous ketone-based metabolic therapy together with a moderately high-fat diet may stimulate host cell metabolism and defenses as a possible treatment to blunt the cytokine storm associated with severe SARS-CoV-2 infection. A clinical trial testing this therapy on patients with SARS-CoV-2 is warranted. In addition, further mouse IAV infection studies will aid in the determination of permissive dietary conditions under which exogenous ketone supplementation enhances immune function to facilitate viral clearance and decrease mortality.
I also remember an article from this spring about two regions in China having very different COVID outcome. They also had very different diets where the one doing better ate much less carbohydrates. But I cannot find the link - sorry. Anyone else remember this?
thanks also.I didn't see that one, but this piece from the British Medical Journal is interesting.
COVID-19 and metabolic syndrome: could diet be the key?
Interesting discussion. It got me thinking. So many people don't feel like eating when sick. This induces ketosis. A natural body defense built into our DNA through the eons when we've faced these kinds of threats before?
With husband having same mild symptoms since Thursday with fever disappearing after first day. He’s now just tired and sniffly and enjoying being waited on. Hope he continues to feel better. He got the not rapid test, so really still waiting for results.
Hi Cindy,
Thank you!, Thank you!, Thank you! This is really encouraging.
We are similar to you and your hubby. Need things to do. Love the idea of having a schedule with things to look forward to.
Similar to your experience, right now DW's Mom is in cognitive decline. DW is working hard with her sister to get them into a retirement place. This is made harder because they are 2 1/2 hours away. The retirement place they have selected will reduce the drive for us to 1 1/2 hours.
With the cognitive decline, MIL seems much happier when her daughters are with her. So both are trying to spend more time with them. Plus having a daughter with them reduces the bickering that is a constant part of their relationship.....
Getting the in-laws moved will also hopefully make it easier to get FIL to reduce his driving. It's getting more and more scary.....
I too am an early morning person. (A little embarrased about how early..) Very much enjoy coffee and the news and this forum early in the AM. Sitting by the fire (wood stove) right now doing exactly that.
Hope you feel better each day now.