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Thread: Fatigue

  1. #16
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    Aug 2007
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    Good things gro-oh-ow in Ontario!
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    Quote Originally Posted by crazycanuck View Post
    Or mozy on down to Aust for some sunshine
    Ah, that would be amazing, perpetual summer!

    Quote Originally Posted by Aggie_Ama View Post
    You can move to Texas where we have 300 sunny days a year. Although Hawaii sounds better.
    I've been thinking about moving back down to the southwest, it might end up being better for my health/sanity. Winters here are just too much snow and gray! Snow is pretty for the first couple days, then I start thinking "Make it STOP!" I should really try snowshoeing or something. I used to love snow in MD when it would happen every once and awhile.

    Quote Originally Posted by tulip View Post
    Hey Firenze, have you always been in Montreal?? That's pretty far north. I had some issues with feeling very low energy when I lived in Paris in winter, which is the same latitude as Montreal. For comparison, New York City is the same latitude as Madrid.
    I haven't always been here, I was actually born in New Mexico so maybe my body just really needs more sun. I just moved up to Canada from the States about 6 years ago and since then I've been having problems in the winter. I just realized the past 2-3 years I've been going to my doctor in December/January asking her to do some blood tests because I'm so tire. It's only this year that I realized I wasn't anemic or something else and started looking into SAD. I never thought of the latitude thing, but this is certainly much further north than I ever thought I'd be.

    I can see the language thing adding a little bit of stress into my life. I'm trying to improve my French, so it's another thing that my brain is focusing on a lot. Although, I feel lucky that I can pretty much just speak English when I need to.

    And regarding the lights, the doctor told me I needed to get one that is 10000 lux. Apparently regular rooms are like 100 lux, so it's way brighter, helps mimic what the sun does, and the spectrum they use helps to reset the circadian rhythm. I have one on the way so I'm keeping my fingers crossed it helps.

    Also, just as a side note, I was a bit shocked by my appointment. Even though I'm not experiencing a mood change/the depression side of SAD, he told me that he preferred to put people on antidepressants between October and March. I had done research beforehand and everything said light box first and foremost along w/ exercise, eating well, etc. I was just really surprised that drugs would be his first choice. . .maybe it's because he's a university doctor? I don't know. I was also surprised that most insurance companies wouldn't cover the light therapy but will cover medication. Hm. (I know the medication works wonders for many many people and I'm not against it for the right situation, but it just felt very wrong for me and my situation).

    Whew, that's a long one! Thanks for all your help, advice, experiences!
    "Live, more than your neighbors. Unleash yourself upon the world and go places. Go now! Giggle. Know. Laugh. And bark the the moon like the wild dog that you are!" - Jon Blais

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    somewhere between the Red & Rio Grande
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    5,297
    Who cannot want to come back to the Southwest? I want to move all over Texas and even into New Mexico. Too bad I don't have a willing nomad at home!

    Any chance you can go to another doctor? I have had too many friends get put on anti-depressants as a first choice and regretted it. Sucks about the light not being covered, it seems like a nice option at least for my friend.
    Amanda

    2011 Specialized Epic Comp 29er | Specialized Phenom | "Marie Laveau"
    2007 Cannondale Synapse Carbon Road | Selle Italia Lady Gel Flow | "Miranda"


    You don't have to be great to get started, but you do have to get started to be great. -Lee J. Colan

  3. #18
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Michigan
    Posts
    865
    [QUOTE=firenze11;372251]Thanks. I think I will maybe cut back for a bit just to see if it helps or not, I feel better today after skipping spin so maybe it was good to take a day off. I'm also thinking about going to the doc to ask about possible mild SAD. I guess it wouldn't hurt [/QUOTECan you be getting SAD this early? I live in southern Michigan , and that won't really hit here until dark and gloomy November. Fall is actually really sunny and nice here. But winter is a dark dreary nasty thing, and I am a native Floridian. My Michigan native husband did not warn me that this is the 3rd grayest place in the country.

  4. #19
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
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    1,708
    Quote Originally Posted by aicabsolut View Post
    Just an FYI, the tanning bed lamps aren't the right grade (spectrum?) to treat SAD. They make special sunlamps for that, so while it doesn't matter for you, tell your friends to save their skin and get outdoors or look into getting a real lamp (they are $$$$) if their SAD is bad enough.

    Ahh, that's good to know. I knew there was something "special" to the type of light, but didn't know what. Maybe it mentally makes them feel better if they look like summer (tan). I'm always just trying to not fry with sunburn or die of skin ca.

  5. #20
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    S. Lake Tahoe CA and Marion Mass
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    359
    Quote Originally Posted by Miranda View Post
    Ahh, that's good to know. I knew there was something "special" to the type of light, but didn't know what. Maybe it mentally makes them feel better if they look like summer (tan). I'm always just trying to not fry with sunburn or die of skin ca.
    I will sheepishly admit that I did my one and only visit to a tanning booth last year in a crazy attempt to find sunshine in New England in winter. I can see why people go to them in the winter. It felt really good while I was there. BUT that night I felt like a piece of bacon. I swear I was sizzling in my bed. I only spent 2 minutes in the lowest wattage one (I know the owner) and I just couldn't figure out how people could be in it longer. It was pretty intense.

    The weird thing for me is I actually get out more at night and walk my dog in the peace and quiet and feel better being in the cold air. I know what I'm missing and it's being outside and the sun, so I think I'm going to put money towards a vacation this winter somewhere warm, or maybe a couple of flights to Florida.

    The thing about living in the Sierras is that even though you are buried under snow, the sun pops out after every storm. And with all that snow around you, it is that much brighter. So here when the sun goes in I wilt.

    Yes you will find that taking a day off makes you stronger. Everything gets to relax and rebuild. It was one of the lessons I should of learned but I'm getting there. It's just that I like to bike

  6. #21
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Between the Blue Ridge and the Chesapeake Bay
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    5,203
    Almost two years ago I did something that had never done before--I went south in February. My stepmother and I went to Nicaragua for 10 days. It was WONDERFUL. When I got back, it was almost March, and in these parts, that's a bearable wait until spring.

    Interestingly, aside from Nicaraguans, the most people I met there were Canadians.

  7. #22
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    St. Louis, MO
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    1,058
    I know in the winter, if left alone, I will hibernate. When it gets dark, I'm ready to crawl in bed by 8. I tried to get up at 6:30 for a bike ride this morning, but the sun wasn't up--so I rolled back over and went back to sleep!

    To counteract this--in the evening, I make an effort to turn on every light in the house--this keeps me awake until at least 9 pm. When I worked in an office, I went to the gym every day after work--that also kept me up a little later.
    "Well-behaved women seldom make history." --Laurel Thatcher Ulrich

    '09 Trek WSD 2.1 with a Brooks B-68 saddle
    '11 Trek WSD Madone 5.2 with Brooks B-17

  8. #23
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
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    6,984
    Be fair to yourself firenze. Would agree that NM was sunnier. We vacationed in Sante Fe and Alburqueque area for a wk. and noticed the amount of light there. By the way, we LOVED it there.

    While Montreal gets more snow and cold than lower Mainland/Vancouver and Vancouver is a beautiful city, for myself since relocating to Vancouver, I find the rainy months...just barely bearable than the snow and ice. I never knew how much I disliked many winter days of greyness, persistent rain ....snow, especially clean dry snow is preferable to this. I don't get SADD just fed-up slugging through rain.

    Don't give up on exercise, but don't be hard on yourself for days you want to lighten up abit. Otherwise you'll just burn-out...

    HOpe all is going well on other fronts in your life.
    Last edited by shootingstar; 10-24-2008 at 08:12 PM.

  9. #24
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
    Posts
    13,394
    I don't have SAD, but I do notice around here people constantly complain about the winter... hey, it's New England!
    My key to dealing with the short amount of light is to get outside! I didn't do that the first ten years or so after we moved back, except for playing in the snow with my kids. All of my exercise was at the gym. Now, while I still go to the gym, I do something outside at least 3 days a week, sometimes more. It might be just a fitness walk, or hiking, snow shoeing, or x country skiing. The true winter season seems pretty short when you you look at it this way. We don't get much snow until December and any snow we get in March is nice, spring skiing conditions, but is gone rather quickly. Usually I'm outside riding a bit in March, too.
    I think it's natural to want to curl up by the fire and chill during these months, but if you keep getting some exercise outside, it seems to keep it in balance.

  10. #25
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    Bavaria, Germany
    Posts
    28

    Find a workout buddy!

    Firenze, I am *so* with you. I have been getting sad and tired in the winter for my whole adult life. I also crave exercise, because I have been a fitness professional since 1999. But even I get low in the energy department once the sun starts setting at 4 p.m.! It got so bad last year that I (gasp!) STOPPED working out. Horrible.

    My solution: I now have a workout partner, and even if I am tired and depressed, I would not miss our gym workouts for the world! We count on each other and we never, ever cancel, no matter how down or busy (we are both grad students) we are. It is the best arrangement ever. We work out twice as hard as we would if we were working out alone, and because we get to chat between sets, we don't even realize how much work we are doing until we are exhausted--and happy!--at the end of the session.

    Do you have the opportunity to post a flier or notify other women in your area that you want a workout buddy? I met mine at a networking event at school. But seeking out other students in spin classes or yoga classes might be a great idea.

    Best of luck!
    There's only one thing better than spending a day on my bike: Spending a day on my bike in good company.

  11. #26
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    S. Lake Tahoe CA and Marion Mass
    Posts
    359
    I have to agree with Crankin about getting outside. My dumpy feeling already started and thankfully, someone figured out the ankle mystery and it's healing. So I started running. I have a running partner too, and she doesn't let me slack. The cold nose goes a long way as does the click click click of the toenails on the hardwood floor when she realizes that it's getting later without getting outside. Border collies. Now if only she would figure out how to turn on the coffee pot and change the laundry...

  12. #27
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    546

    I tried the full spectrum light

    I get SAD, and I live in coastal southern california! I tried the full spectrum lights. It was inconvenient - you expose yourself to the light (shining into your eyes) for I seem to recall 45 minutes in the am, first thing upon arising from bed. I read the newspaper. I got some tanning/freckling. And my opthamologist was not cool with it. And it didn't work. Tried Wellbutrin - I think it worked - a tiny bit- because of the palcebo effect. this spring, my internist started me on Vitamin D (50,000 units of ergocalciferol) he checked my vit D level first with a blood test. I am on it primarily for my osteoporosis (along with fosamax and estradiol) but he said it is also linked to reduced rates of colon cancer and heart disease. But I noticed that once the days started getting shorter, I wasn't getting the short days blues - for me it's a remarkable improvement. I am quite pleased, and apparently my bones, colon and heart will be too. Tokie

  13. #28
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    Good things gro-oh-ow in Ontario!
    Posts
    382
    Here's a bit of an update but more of a, hmm, question, maybe.

    Thanks for all your responses, I am finding that if I get out in the sunshine for a walk I do feel a lot better and less tired. Waking up to some sunlight in the morning seems to be helping. I have a light box coming, so I'm going to give it a try. Can't hurt, right? I still think I probably have mild SAD, winter blues I guess they call it.

    I'm wondering more and more, though, about this overtraining business. It never really crossed my mind until I posted. . .and I'm having a hard time believing I could have overtrained because I'm only doing 3 hours of workouts a week and I always thought overtraining happened to those 6-7 days/week 1+ hour hardcore athletes. But lately my legs have started feeling heavy and tired when I do pretty basic stuff like walking up the hill to my apartment or walking up the library stairs, and my knee and ankle joints are feeling sore and achy (I've never had this before). It's all pretty darn mild, but noticeable enough for me to question where it's coming from because it feels like each week is a little more noticeable. And it feels different from DOMS.

    So at this point I don't know if I should suck it up and stick with my spin classes until they end in a few weeks or take a break. I'm hesitant to take a break because I really really enjoy being active and I already paid for the classes ( Does that make me cheap or something?)

    Ugh! Sorry, I guess mainly I'm venting some frustrations.
    "Live, more than your neighbors. Unleash yourself upon the world and go places. Go now! Giggle. Know. Laugh. And bark the the moon like the wild dog that you are!" - Jon Blais

  14. #29
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    Folsom CA
    Posts
    5,667
    Quote Originally Posted by firenze11 View Post
    I'm wondering more and more, though, about this overtraining business. It never really crossed my mind until I posted. . .and I'm having a hard time believing I could have overtrained because I'm only doing 3 hours of workouts a week and I always thought overtraining happened to those 6-7 days/week 1+ hour hardcore athletes.
    That's precisely what I thought too back when I was having fatigue problems last year - I didn't think I was doing enough to be "overtrained" ! Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't - but all I know is, once I took some off, I felt much better when I did start up again.

    Have you had a checkup recently to rule out any other possibilities? Thyroid issues, that sort of thing? (apologies if you already discussed this).

    That's a drag that you already paid for spin classes. Is there any way they could defer your membership, if only for a few weeks?

    Wishing you the best.

    2009 Lynskey R230 Houseblend - Brooks Team Pro
    2007 Rivendell Bleriot - Rivet Pearl

  15. #30
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
    Posts
    14,498
    What about your protein intake? I get sore and tired when I'm not getting enough protein. I seem to need way more protein than I think I ought to - fish after every hard strength workout makes an enormous difference to me. If you eat fish. I have issues with protein powders
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

 

 

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