Quizzes & Puzzles6 mins ago
My BF thinks I am mad
12 Answers
do you?
The last week I have been really really tired. I've been coming home from work feeling tired and then developing a dull frontal headache, feeling slightly nauseous, feeling desperate to go to bed and then only sleeping half the night. My limbs feel heavy and my head light and full of cotton wool and I am completely unable to think. This afternoon when I got in, I hadn't been in long when I started to feel bad so I went out for a breath of fresh air which immediately revived me.
I have now made him turn off the boiler until we can get a carbon monoxide detector. He tells me there is "no way" it can be the boiler and there is "no way" it would travel upstairs (boiler is in kitchen) and anyway he says he has no symptoms at all.
Am I just a hypochondriac who is probably a bit under the weather, or am I right to be concerned? Incidentally, he can't actually remember the last time the boiler was serviced........
The last week I have been really really tired. I've been coming home from work feeling tired and then developing a dull frontal headache, feeling slightly nauseous, feeling desperate to go to bed and then only sleeping half the night. My limbs feel heavy and my head light and full of cotton wool and I am completely unable to think. This afternoon when I got in, I hadn't been in long when I started to feel bad so I went out for a breath of fresh air which immediately revived me.
I have now made him turn off the boiler until we can get a carbon monoxide detector. He tells me there is "no way" it can be the boiler and there is "no way" it would travel upstairs (boiler is in kitchen) and anyway he says he has no symptoms at all.
Am I just a hypochondriac who is probably a bit under the weather, or am I right to be concerned? Incidentally, he can't actually remember the last time the boiler was serviced........
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Barmaid. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.i would say get a CO detector anyway.
as for the feeling ill, have you felt ill at work too? it could be something there just as easily as at home.
Or maybe dehydration from central heating, a general bug?
ive felt the same, bt without the headache for a couple of weeks now and have put it down to work and central heating
as for the feeling ill, have you felt ill at work too? it could be something there just as easily as at home.
Or maybe dehydration from central heating, a general bug?
ive felt the same, bt without the headache for a couple of weeks now and have put it down to work and central heating
I'm going to get one in the morning Sara. Got work to do tonight!
Ummmm - I wonder?!
I work all over Red, but have felt fine once I am in the car and in "work mode". I have felt very dehydrated though and am going through fruit juice like there is no tomorrow.
He just came in again and said "there is no way its cm". Sometimes, men can be twits.
Ummmm - I wonder?!
I work all over Red, but have felt fine once I am in the car and in "work mode". I have felt very dehydrated though and am going through fruit juice like there is no tomorrow.
He just came in again and said "there is no way its cm". Sometimes, men can be twits.
Fond this on another site........
Question - Does carbon monoxide rise or sink if produced inside a
house? Why? Does natural gas rise or sink?
(I am trying to figure out where to position gas detectors).
---------------------------------------------
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Although the molecular weights of these gases differ, convection and not
density differences dominate the distribution of CO, methane etc. The
release of gases associated with combustion tend to rise because they are
hotter than ambient. For this reason smoke detectors and CO detectors are
usually placed high on the walls of hallways etc.
Question - Does carbon monoxide rise or sink if produced inside a
house? Why? Does natural gas rise or sink?
(I am trying to figure out where to position gas detectors).
---------------------------------------------
--------------
Although the molecular weights of these gases differ, convection and not
density differences dominate the distribution of CO, methane etc. The
release of gases associated with combustion tend to rise because they are
hotter than ambient. For this reason smoke detectors and CO detectors are
usually placed high on the walls of hallways etc.