Iris.Ell wrote:
Your vitamin D level is very important, try to supplement again with MK7 (K2) which makes it better to absorb . Even better, get some sun in the morning.
Luckily I routinely eat a lot of spinach, which gives me plenty of K1. AFAIK the exact type of K isn't considered important. You're right that I should find a way of getting more vitamin D again, and a new bottle would only cost me $9.27 for a year's supply.
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It's also your psychology that counts, do you have depression? Although, even if you aren't , if you don't sleep well it can make you depressed.
I've been sleeping quite well usually. I'm not clinically depressed but I do have times when I may qualify as subclinically so, though I've seen no strong correlation between how I feel physically in the mornings and how depressed I am.
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Have you checked for conditions of the thyroid, for chronic fatigue, for fibromyalgia (if you also have pains in your muscles). Those exams where I live, are not too expensive, but I feel for you if you are a US citizen..
I'm a UK citizen who lives in the USA a lot. There's virtually no spare money, so such checks are pretty much unaffordable for me in the USA even if they're relatively cheap, though if I had information strongly suggesting one of those conditions was the culprit, I'd want to prioritise the relevent test in my budget. And if I could present my data to the UK NHS, I might be able to get them to co-operate with a test, but there'd likely be a long wait and I might well have returned to the USA by the time it came up. I don't suffer from muscle pain and I don't feel abnormally fatigued in general. Even first thing when I wake, I'm in the habit of almost bouncing out of bed.
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Yes, you need a general health examination, it might even be your oxygen levels (lungs), or your heart condition.
I gather they do such things a lot more in the USA, where as I've said, I can't afford them. In the UK, the NHS doesn't seem to bother much, except for the occasional specific ailments when they've got a bee in their bonnet and they invite everybody in for a particular test. Blood tests for a whole shebang of problems doesn't seem to be in their routine, and they've never invited me to have that. Back in the day, there was a strange paradox that although the USA over-treats and the UK under-treats, and the USA healthcare spend per citizen was double that in the UK, the UK scored better for health than the USA did. But these days the NHS is more cash-strapped than ever, so I don't know if that's still the case.
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PS. You can check radiation by a radiation meter that you can easily buy or a phone app. I doubt it it is that in your case.
Again, it would be hard for me to justify the expenditure to check for something that seems unlikely to be a problem. But thanks for your ideas.