My first tactic with confusing health problems is adjusting my diet, but I seem to be more affected by diet than the typical person, so your mileage may vary Taking a very complete multivitamin for a few days and seeing if you feel any different is an easy way to check for nutrition deficiencies, if your blood tests didn’t check for that (or only checked for a few usual suspects). If you do feel different, then you at least know you were deficient in something. You could also do an elimination diet for the most common food allergies, but that takes a lot of effort, so it might not be worth it if you and your family don’t have a history of food issues.
If you’re more sensitive to cold at some times than others, try to notice the fluctuation and see if it correlates with anything (especially stress, based on ChristianKi’s comment). Maybe try writing down how cold you felt and what you did that day? (I usually don’t write this sort of thing down, even though I know I should.)
My diet has had a random drift over time due to practical concerns, taste changing etc… and random diet adjustments don’t seem to have a noticeable effect. There might some specific nutritional strategies that would help—I don’t have enough information to choose one, though.
More data and more detailed observations seem like a good idea. There might have been some fluctuations, but I’m not noticing any obvious correlations (besides, you know, exposure to cold temperatures).
It’s possible. I don’t know.
I eat when I’m hungry, which is quite regularly (once per 3-4 hours, maybe 5), so I’m definitely not starving myself. And if I try to eat more, I feel unpleasantly full, and I feel less hungry later—so I don’t think it makes a difference.
I’m not sure how to check whether I’m eating enough save for counting calories (which seems complicated and unreliable).
I’m hoping I’ll gain some muscle mass by exercise, both for its own sake and because weight gain by other means doesn’t seem to be working for me (I suspect I naturally have a slim build).
My first tactic with confusing health problems is adjusting my diet, but I seem to be more affected by diet than the typical person, so your mileage may vary Taking a very complete multivitamin for a few days and seeing if you feel any different is an easy way to check for nutrition deficiencies, if your blood tests didn’t check for that (or only checked for a few usual suspects). If you do feel different, then you at least know you were deficient in something. You could also do an elimination diet for the most common food allergies, but that takes a lot of effort, so it might not be worth it if you and your family don’t have a history of food issues.
If you’re more sensitive to cold at some times than others, try to notice the fluctuation and see if it correlates with anything (especially stress, based on ChristianKi’s comment). Maybe try writing down how cold you felt and what you did that day? (I usually don’t write this sort of thing down, even though I know I should.)
Interesting perspective, thanks.
I am taking vitamins and have been for some time.
My diet has had a random drift over time due to practical concerns, taste changing etc… and random diet adjustments don’t seem to have a noticeable effect. There might some specific nutritional strategies that would help—I don’t have enough information to choose one, though.
More data and more detailed observations seem like a good idea. There might have been some fluctuations, but I’m not noticing any obvious correlations (besides, you know, exposure to cold temperatures).
This is a long shot, but is there a chance you’re eating less than you need?
It’s possible. I don’t know. I eat when I’m hungry, which is quite regularly (once per 3-4 hours, maybe 5), so I’m definitely not starving myself. And if I try to eat more, I feel unpleasantly full, and I feel less hungry later—so I don’t think it makes a difference.
I’m not sure how to check whether I’m eating enough save for counting calories (which seems complicated and unreliable).
I’m hoping I’ll gain some muscle mass by exercise, both for its own sake and because weight gain by other means doesn’t seem to be working for me (I suspect I naturally have a slim build).
At this point, I’d say it’s unlikely that you’re eating so little as to lower your temperature.
If you still want to test the hypothesis without counting calories, you could try a higher fat diet and see what happens.
Does your temperature ever get higher or lower?