What a lovely singing voice you must have."There is no donuts, only GRUEL"
What a lovely singing voice you must have."There is no donuts, only GRUEL"
Have you been getting enough sleep? Are you allowed caffeine? Could you try taking a nap at lunch?I'm having a rough morning. For some reason I'm extremely exhausted, and even drinking protein shake is a little uncomfortable. I considered calling in sick today, but started feeling a little less bad, so here I am. I'm hoping with small amounts of water and peanut butter, I'll make it through the day... but I might have to knock off early.
Yes. No. Yes.Have you been getting enough sleep? Are you allowed caffeine? Could you try taking a nap at lunch?
Yeah, I've got myfitnesspal's app on my phone. It's more difficult to use, however, when I'm no longer eating standard serving sizes. Like.... I just had some peanut butter to help me perk up, but I have no idea how much it was. Less than a serving, I think? I'm terrible at estimating ounces and stuff.... Welp. Maybe you should keep a food journal for a little while, so you can keep an eye on your macros until you adjust? There's sites like MyFitnessPal that make it easier. That way you won't be waylaid by over/under-shooting.
I was on the same boat for a long while. I use a cheap 2000gx0.1g digital scale ($8-14 on amazon usually, plus the price of whatever weights you need to calibrate it) that can do grams and ounces (and tare) to check. Now I'm comfortable (and decently accurate) with estimating foods I know, but I still weigh them if I have the time, esp. ingredients when cooking complicated meals.Yeah, I've got myfitnesspal's app on my phone. It's more difficult to use, however, when I'm no longer eating standard serving sizes. Like.... I just had some peanut butter to help me perk up, but I have no idea how much it was. Less than a serving, I think? I'm terrible at estimating ounces and stuff.
Low blood sugar?Welp, I just crashed, somewhere around 4:00 I think. I just woke up with my head on my desk. I haven't been this tired since my first week back to work. And I've had 2 protein shakes, peanut butter, and even a little chicken today. Not sure what's up.
I don't know how that could be, this has probably been my most calorie-rich day since the surgery.Low blood sugar?
Try to have some fruit for your next meal and see if you feel better. Can you have fruit juice instead of water?I don't know how that could be, this has probably been my most calorie-rich day since the surgery.
But it's hard to brain right now.
I think that is how I got into this mess in the first place.Try to have some fruit for your next meal and see if you feel better. Can you have fruit juice instead of water?
But yeah, I can have fruit juice, in addition to water.I think I didn't get enough calories last night, and this morning I'm paying for it.
What'd I have?
About 4 ounces of mixed fruit (Pineapple, peach, pear).
It was good. It was filling. It was about 70 calories and contained no protein whatsoever.
Healing up after surgery is probably just as metabolism-intensive as healing up after a workout.Welp, I just crashed, somewhere around 4:00 I think. I just woke up with my head on my desk. I haven't been this tired since my first week back to work. And I've had 2 protein shakes, peanut butter, and even a little chicken today. Not sure what's up.
Replacing one meal with fruit should not completely wipe you out unless you were dramatically under caloried. Because of the water content in fruit I wonder if you could replace one of your water times with fruit if you are eating fruit twice in one day.I think that is how I got into this mess in the first place.
But yeah, I can have fruit juice, in addition to water.
With all the peanut butter I'm eating, I doubt it's low sodium.Could you be low on electrolytes or just salt? You've mentioned a multivitamin, but you could still be running low on sodium/potassium/magnesium/etc due to how little food you get. There's the little packets of them you can buy at pharmacies, or something pre-mixed like Powerade Zero.
+1 on talking with your doctors if possible, or going to a walk-in clinic to check your vitals if this continues.
Haha yeeeaaaah, there's either a law, an industry regulation, or a standard where 100+mg is supposed to be prescription-only in supplements due to the overdose risk (it's slightly more lethal than table salt by weight when ingested).As for the rest, I'm getting 400mg of magnesium a day, but curiously, only 99mg of potassium, now that I look at the label.
Or I could start eating bananas.Haha yeeeaaaah, there's either a law, an industry regulation, or a standard where 100+mg is supposed to be prescription-only in supplements due to the overdose risk (it's slightly more lethal than table salt by weight when ingested).
I would recommend picking up a tub of either Morton Lite Salt (50/50 table salt/potassium salt) or any brand of K-Salt (potassium salt). I like Morton's because I can't taste the potassium when mixed into food. The average American diet (and mine doubly so due to keto woes) seems pretty potassium-deficient, I don't think I've had a cramp since switching to it, and it's been years.
To meet the U.S. RDA for potassium from bananas alone you'd need to eat about 10 a day. Or you could figure out how much potassium is in your current diet, and supplement with saltOr I could start eating bananas.
Well, half a banana, probably.
Yeah, but see the link. Every population study I've seen shows that nearly everyone in the U.S. is not getting enough.That's odd, I thought one banana had like 400mg of potassium.
bolded relevant parts said:On the basis of available data, an Adequate Intake (AI) for potassium is set at 4.7 g (120 mmol)/day for all adults. This level of dietary intake (i.e., from foods) should maintain lower blood pressure levels, reduce the adverse effects of sodium chloride intake on blood pressure, reduce the risk of recurrent kidney stones, and possibly decrease bone loss. Because of insufficient data from dose-response trials demonstrating these effects, an Estimated Average Requirement (EAR) could not be established, and thus a Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) could not be derived.
Yep - 422mg for a medium size banana.That's odd, I thought one banana had like 400mg of potassium.