I feel perpetually sleepy.

I have a hard time napping during the day- scratch that I can’t nap during the day. My anxiety makes it impossible. However the second I crack open a book I feel like I’m going to pass out. It’s very strange.

  • MrsDoyle@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    My brother was sleepy all the time. It came to a head when he fell asleep at the wheel. Luckily the car drifted off the road onto a grass verge and no-one was hurt. Turned out he had sleep apnea - his breathing stopped time and again through the night, waking him. He never ever had a good deep sleep. He now has a CPAP machine that keeps his airways open while he sleeps. He says he’s a new man.

    • disguy_ovahea@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Good advice. Cardio won’t fix fatigue, but a lack of cardio will induce it. It’s an easy place for OP to start, and if they still feel fatigue after two weeks of daily cardio they know to look elsewhere.

  • emmie@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    I used to. It was you could say „severe hormone imbalance”. Now after fixing that I have more energy than I ever would need honestly to the point I need to go running or something.

    Unless I don’t sleep well then I just wait for the night whole day which happens more often than I’d like to. I need to be asleep already at 12 am and wake up at 8-9 to sleep well.

    Problem is I work/think/focus best at 10pm-12am and I need to time my cbd oil into that to sleep. And considering the stuff makes me high for some reason even tho it shouldn’t theoretically then it gets complicated to schedule it all for optimal sleep.

    In any case the oil removed anxiety from my life so that’s nice, maybe not completely I still get nervous some times y know but it’s big difference

  • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I found out in January that, every now and then, when I’m asleep, my heart stops for extended periods. 8 seconds, 5 seconds, 4 seconds.

    I wore a heart monitor all March and it happened 3 times. But never when I’m awake.

    Now I have a hard time sleeping. (3:48 AM)

    • InputZero@lemmy.ml
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      3 months ago

      I hope you’re seeing a doctor or medical professional about that. An unsteady heartbeat can be very serious.

      • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        A bunch of them! Yeah! Next step is a long term monitor under the skin. If it’s happening during the day, that’s a quick trip to a pacemaker. :(

  • Richard@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    A whole lot of things can be going on. Some vitamin levels can be low, it can be ADHD which just seems to get worse with age, and can also explain the anxiety. Of course capitalism plays a role.

    But best thing is, get your blood levels checked, if it is a simple deficiency it is ‘easy’, otherwise you have to dig deeper, but of course, getting sunlight, try to go to sleep at a reasonable time, and eat healthy are things you could start doing right now.

  • Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    3 months ago

    If you have access to it, consider getting a sleep study done. There’s a bunch of different things that can cause daytime sleepiness that all need to be treated in different ways. If it’s something like sleep apnea it’s really important to get it treated ASAP.

    It’s super annoying too because you’re not going to necessarily have any idea anything unusual is happening after you go to sleep, unless you have a partner that brings it up.

    • CALIGVLA@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 months ago

      If it’s something like sleep apnea it’s really important to get it treated ASAP.

      Sleep apnea is also linked to heart diseases, it’s a really serious thing to left unchecked.

    • Syn_Attck@lemmy.today
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      3 months ago

      Also if you don’t exercise and get good cardio in daily, anxiety and sleep will be issues by default. It’s crazy how sedimentary some of us are. If I don’t exercise for a week, I get massive anxiety, am unreasonably tired during the day but can’t sleep well, and the next few days my pores are dripping sweat, until I get back on cardio track and go back to not sweating much.

      Cardio is as evolutionarily necessary and inbuilt for humans as pooping and sleeping, and – funny thing if you’ve experienced a panic attack before, you just feel like you have to run. It’s insane how much gunk is cleaned out if your largest bodily organ when you run. From pouring stinky sweat for a couple days to barely sweating. And the sleep, energy and mood quality difference is also insane.

      • egonallanon@lemm.ee
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        3 months ago

        Agreed on the cardio thing. I run pretty regularly but a knee injury has put stop to that for the last month or so and I’ve just been miserable and bad tempered. Last time I felt like this was when I quit smoking.

      • Pixel@pawb.social
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        3 months ago

        agree with everything you said here, but if im not the pedant someone else will be – sedentary, not sedimentary. At least I don’t like to think I’m sediment

  • midori@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Yes, but it’s because of multiple sleep disorders and neurological disorders. It’s best to get a polysomnogram to determine if you have anything wrong with your sleep patterns. If that yields nothing, then a CAT scan may be in order to determine if anything is wrong inside your skull. If that also returns normal, then at least you’re otherwise healthy.

    Source: had to go through all of this

  • Russ@bitforged.space
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    3 months ago

    Yes, unfortunately. It’s something that I’m working on with multiple doctors and practitioners, and so far we’ve gone through some of the usual suspects (Vitamin D levels, checking thyroid function, making sure I wasn’t diabetic - already had my doubts on that one but I’m not the one with the medical degree I suppose…, etc).

    My mental health isn’t always the best, so I’m trying to get that worked on as well because bad mental health can cause lethargy and chronic fatigue (it’s a two-way street though, the reverse applies too)… Unfortunately a lot of mental health meds have fatigue as a side effect which doesn’t help my case. It also doesn’t help that I have Crohn’s disease, and any autoimmune/chronic condition in general can also cause chronic fatigue.

    I don’t know, I still feel like the root cause of it is an imbalance of something, but that’s my best “gut instinct” guess - I have nothing concrete to base that off of. It feels like all of the things I’m trying are just attempting to “brute force” the issues away, rather than treating whatever is the root cause, but I digress… All I know is, it feels like the game was rigged against me from the start.

    • 🩸Jezebelley🩸@leminal.spaceOP
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      3 months ago

      Hey thanks for sharing all about what you’re going through. Life sucks sometimes, and I have no doubt my anxiety disorder plays a large role in why I’m fatigued. At least we have kind people online to commiserate with, and understand that we’re not alone.

      • Russ@bitforged.space
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        3 months ago

        Of course! I don’t know if my ramblings will help at all, but I figured it couldn’t hurt to share regardless :)

  • kromem@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Things that might be helpful for people in here:

    • Get iron levels checked. A lot of people are actually pretty low. Make sure doctor using more recent reference ranges, as there’s been a lot of bad outdated info about iron and infusions

    • Glycine. It lowers your core body temperature when taking before bed which puts you into deep sleep faster and more frequently so you end up waking up feeling more rested with the same amount of sleep

    • waterbogan@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Glycine

      Thanks for this tip, I dont have trouble sleeping generally but my partner does, will look into this for him

    • amminadabz@sh.itjust.works
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      3 months ago

      Also, get a sleep study for sleep apnea. “It is estimated to affect 10% to 30% of adults in the United States but in many cases goes undiagnosed”. -National Sleep Foundation

  • TrendigOsthyvel@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I was falling asleep all the time and all the places. Found out at the age of 23 I had a cyst in my brain blocking the liquids inside my head from flowing freely, thus affecting the whole of me in various and weird ways. Felt like shit growing up and hating everything. One brain surgery later, with complications of course, because why not? I felt like a completely new person, for good and for bad.

      • TrendigOsthyvel@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I had spasms during the procedure with a bleeding in my brain as a result. Took me almost a year of getting back on my feet. But today I am super grateful to have a completely different possibility on life. This was ages ago today, but I carry it with me almost everyday.