Being a freckled, Irish strawberry blonde, I’ve always been sensitive to heat. I have to be careful about sunburns because, oh buddy, they happen quickly and are brutal.
About two years ago though, I noticed that I was sweating all the time, mostly along my hairline, and even in situations that didn’t seem to warrant it. It also gave me a sense of claustrophobia and drained my energy at a faster rate. I started to choose activities based on temperature, no joke.
Fast forward to this past fall, when I finally started getting answers to my health questions. It turns out people with fibromyalgia often have temperature dysregulation, an inability to moderate our own body temperature. While it looks different for each person, for me, it means:
* being warm/hot 95% of the time
* even when the weather is freezing (hi, I’m a Minnesotan)
* a shower or blowdrying my hair can make me feel like I’m experiencing a hot flash
* I’m ultra sensitive to it to the point where I feel like I can’t breathe well and experience exhaustion
* I have a fan on while those who share my office have their space heaters going
* even coming in from a cold Minnesota day into a regular indoor temperature feels like such a sudden rush of heat that it spreads across my body, my entire scalp, and across my jaw
It’s actually been really good to read up about it. This is a particularly good article, but there are so many articles written and studies done on fibro and temperature problems.
What this means for me, much of which you will never see:
* when someone suggests an activity, I judge it based on how warm/hot it will make me and what opportunities I will have to cool down (for example, going to an outdoor baseball game in the sun would be a terrible idea for me … going hiking would be actually detrimental)
* When I feel myself overheating, I have to stop and cool my body temp down; letting myself pass a certain point will actually make me sick for 2-3 days. It’s better to just go stand in front of my open window for 5-10 minutes and cool my core down.
* it has very little to do with my weight and everything to do with my hypothalamus.
* I have to be careful with exercise. Walking and yoga do the trick; cardio would make me sick for a week.
* I’m ultra aware of not dressing too warm. I can only wear sweaters and fleece in the coldest weather. I barely wear a coat, even in winter, though I do bring it with me (safety first– Minnesota’s winter temps are no joke!). If I dress for cold weather, I need to wear layers because I will likely need to cool down layer on in the work day.
* Cooling down the palm of the hand helps cool your core. This is key.
Why am I telling you all this?
First, it took me a long time to figure out what was going on with me. Maybe this will help someone else.
Secondly, it’s a friendly reminder about invisible illnesses. Your friend or colleague might be dealing with something that doesn’t make sense to you, but it doesn’t mean it’s not real.
Thirdly, usually the person inside the body knows it best. Well-meaning friends can make all the suggestions they want (“Come to my spin class!” “You’ll feel better if you just …”), but it’s your body. You know what will feel better or worse. Trust yourself. Trust the body owner.
Yes, it has been so cold, you’d think I would welcome the recent heat (which I’m experiencing in my hometown too). But the medication I use for OCD makes me over heat easily, and I also keep a fan going at night through the winters! I actually like it a bit on the chilly side anyways, although not ten feet of snow and patches of ice and chilly winds!
I’m totally the same! Depending on how cold it is, I might be snug under my blanket with that one stray hand out being FREEZING.