@MattE.Эллен Japanese has cha (茶) for tea. Usually rendered as o-cha with the honorific. Thanks to Portuguese traders.
> The earliest of the three [pronunciations, te, cha, and *chai] to enter English is cha, which came in the 1590s via the Portuguese, who traded in Macao and picked up the Cantonese pronunciation of the word
> "tea," 1908, from the Russian or Arabic word for "tea" (see tea, and compare cha). The 1908 citation is in an Arabic context. Now used especially of spiced teas.
@FaheemMitha My doctor sent me to the cardiologist, and the cardiologist sent me do to a Holter monitoring and heart ultrasiound and cardiac artery ultrasound
Yes, it's considered not very good.
I feel tired most of the time, but get better when walking or running.
Dang...can't find it...looking for a graph of connections of Colonial American 'patriots/rebels/terrorists' in the Boston area which showed that Paul Revere was some kind of center of connections among all the revolutionaries
@FaheemMitha I previously thought it was the side effect of too much running. But it could be some other side effect. Who knows. Could be benign
I googled and found that in rare cases escitalopram causes bradycardia. I'm on escitalopram. Maybe I should switch to a different antidepressant and see what happens.
Because if that's the side effect of the drug, it could be the cause of my constant fatigue.
But those rare cases were all in old persons who did not run.
I'll go to some more doctors and see.
My TSH for some reason plummeted to zero, and I had to decrease L-thyroxine from 100 mcg to 75 mcg.
@FaheemMitha I complained of fatigue to my endocrinologist, she made a cortisol test. I had it elevated, she sent me to MRI, made a dexamethasone/cortisol test, and then said "it could be depression". The psychiatrist ran some tests on me, and said I was "one point short of depression, but let's try out an antidepressant and see what happens"
When it comes to mental stuff, it's very important to stay mentally balanced, I find. Because the human mind is quite delicate, and easily damaged. Stress is particularly bad. Stress can cause all sorts of bad things to happen.
@CowperKettle Depressed about anything in particular, or just generally?
But how long did this go on for? Did you think of waiting for it to pass? Could have been a side-effect of some other drug you were taking, or a medical condition.
@CowperKettle That sounds reasonable, as long as it is not dangerous.
@FaheemMitha It lasted right until I started on escitalopram. I felt better in just several days, which is very odd, because an SSRI should take at least 2 weeks even to start having an effect on generation of new cells and connections in the brain.
@FaheemMitha Could have been. But I later tried to go off the drug. And felt worse. And then tried increasing the dose. And felt less depressed. So it could be placebo effect combined with real effect.
@CowperKettle we do have real time updates for buses in some places in the UK. I'm not sure if it's down to satellites or some other tracking mechanism
can be a little frustrating: "The XX is 3 mins away" ... 4 minutes later "The XX is 7 mins away"
Also the last decade or so there are trolleys available that can run several kilometers on batteries. Very good for instances when there's a circuit break.
@CowperKettle While I'm obviously not a medical person, my experience of doctors is that they typically treat their patients like pill receptacles.
They don't have the time, or probably the interest, to get to know the person, his/her circumstances, etc. Which would probably result in better treatment. So they just resort to dosing. While often this is better than nothing, it's still reason for scepticism, specially when it comes to things as dangerous as psychotropic drugs. Anywya, that's my opinion.
@CowperKettle I read that lack of suitable exposure can cause of exacerbate mood disorders, for example. That's just one small aspect.
@CowperKettle Also, there are many different kinds of exercise. Have you tried some others? Assuming that they're an option.
@FaheemMitha The human body is too complex to take into account all aspects. Medical mistakes are inevitable, as is doctors' burnout.
Doctors are overworked, hence burnout, hence mistakes.
> More than one-third of physician assistants (PAs) meet criteria for burnout, suggests a study in the September issue of JAAPA, Journal of the American Academy of PAs (AAPA).
@CowperKettle I know that is true. But my experience is that they don't even try.
And that's actually the good aspect. The bad aspect is that they frequently tend to be criminals. At least in India.
I was actually right now sorting through my mother's medical reports when she was dying of breast cancer in 2018. They must have known there was no hope, because they are not idiots, but they did literally hundreds of tests, scans and procedures. A nice tidy profit from the hospital. What do they care for the outcome?
There's so much of it I'm having to remove it from my regular records and put it in a separate storage area. It brings back some very unpleasant memories.