Entry tags:
(no subject)
Was tired all yesterday, and went to bed at 9:45 when I realized I'd fallen asleep while listening to The Teaching Company's course on stress and the body.* Slept like a rock until some point in the middle of the night when I realized that (a) I'd woken up, (b) it was starting to rain and (c) my head hurt. After wittering about which med to take, I settled on Relpax as (1) less likely to turn me into a zombie today and (2) more appropriate for a pressure-based migraine. It took a while to kick in, but it eventually did and I fell asleep again.
This morning I am still somewhat of a zombie, but much less than yesterday, and my head does not hurt, so I count this a win all-round.
ETA: Also, the attic-squirrel-removal people came around yesterday afternoon and crawled around the attic with an air horn scaring squirrels, so yesterday evening was quiet! No little squirrel feet running along the ductwork! No chirruping echoing out of the vents transfixing the cats! They'll eventually chew their way back in until the owner of the house finally approves replacing the cruddy screen on the eaves with something squirrel-incisor-proof, but we have hopes that the stuff used to repair it will hold out for six weeks until the new house is closed on and we move.
* By Robert Sapolsky, and highly recommended - he makes blathering about gluticosteroids actually interesting, and he's funny.
This morning I am still somewhat of a zombie, but much less than yesterday, and my head does not hurt, so I count this a win all-round.
ETA: Also, the attic-squirrel-removal people came around yesterday afternoon and crawled around the attic with an air horn scaring squirrels, so yesterday evening was quiet! No little squirrel feet running along the ductwork! No chirruping echoing out of the vents transfixing the cats! They'll eventually chew their way back in until the owner of the house finally approves replacing the cruddy screen on the eaves with something squirrel-incisor-proof, but we have hopes that the stuff used to repair it will hold out for six weeks until the new house is closed on and we move.
* By Robert Sapolsky, and highly recommended - he makes blathering about gluticosteroids actually interesting, and he's funny.
