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General Parenting
Body Temperature and Cognitive Thinking
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<blockquote data-quote="dlgallant" data-source="post: 89452" data-attributes="member: 3721"><p>&lt;SIGH&gt; I'm very well aware that everyone's body temp is not 98.6, most women are aware that their body temps change throughout the month. But when your normal body temp drops 2 degrees and you're constantly shivering and have goosebumps when it's 90 degrees out, that is NOT normal. Her doctor isn't sure which comes first, what the cause is, how much if any role it plays, and it even can be a cycle of one thing contributing to another and so on and so on. 2 years ago my daughter was found along side the highway suffering from hypothermia after disapperaing. Her body temp took months to return to normal. At the time everyone assumed the low body temp was due to living on the street. But when the doctor noticed that her last 2 episodes coincided with a significant decrease in HER normal body temp, the doctor reasoned there could likely be a connection. That was all I was trying to say. That physical changes in our body can be connected to our thought processes.</p><p></p><p>I'm trying to blame all my daughter's issues on her body temp. Obviouly she has other issues. And as I feared, she succeeded in getting pregnant. Now she can't fathom what she was thinking or what was driving her. But she's been taking excellent physical care of herself, she's back in college making good grades, and mostly back to her old self. Everyone once in a while she exhibits a disconnect in her thought processes and that's very concerning. With my daughter I truly believe there's a combination of physical causes along with the inability to deal with the abuse she suffered from her father.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dlgallant, post: 89452, member: 3721"] <SIGH> I'm very well aware that everyone's body temp is not 98.6, most women are aware that their body temps change throughout the month. But when your normal body temp drops 2 degrees and you're constantly shivering and have goosebumps when it's 90 degrees out, that is NOT normal. Her doctor isn't sure which comes first, what the cause is, how much if any role it plays, and it even can be a cycle of one thing contributing to another and so on and so on. 2 years ago my daughter was found along side the highway suffering from hypothermia after disapperaing. Her body temp took months to return to normal. At the time everyone assumed the low body temp was due to living on the street. But when the doctor noticed that her last 2 episodes coincided with a significant decrease in HER normal body temp, the doctor reasoned there could likely be a connection. That was all I was trying to say. That physical changes in our body can be connected to our thought processes. I'm trying to blame all my daughter's issues on her body temp. Obviouly she has other issues. And as I feared, she succeeded in getting pregnant. Now she can't fathom what she was thinking or what was driving her. But she's been taking excellent physical care of herself, she's back in college making good grades, and mostly back to her old self. Everyone once in a while she exhibits a disconnect in her thought processes and that's very concerning. With my daughter I truly believe there's a combination of physical causes along with the inability to deal with the abuse she suffered from her father. [/QUOTE]
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