Interestingly enough, I am normally about 97.2, and I am also hyperhydrotic (perspire easily) and very sensitive to heat.
Litoris, I didn’t know this was an actual condition! I am the exact same way. I’ve been told by my parents that I gave them quite a few scares when I was a baby because I would suddenly stop breathing.
My base is somewhere in the vicinity of 97.5. When it hits 99.5, I consider myself to have a fever.
I don’t perspire easily - I almost got heat stroke one hot summer day because we were exercising in the sun and I was hardly perspiring at all.
My base seems to be 35,8 C (96.44 F). I’ve felt like death warmed over on 100 F.
I do suffer from the heat more than most. I love autumn and spring for that reason.
97.1 here. I also feel warm to other people. In college and my club-hopping days I was always the “official hand-warmer” for all the other girls I was with, since we’d stand outside in the cold with no coats on.
I’m sensitive to the heat, too. I hate summer. It’s part of why I love living here, it’s only hot 3 months out of the year. I still consider Alaska an option for future residency!
I haven’t checked back with this thread because I got a horrendous bout of food poisoning (from a mass-produced prepackaged chocolate muffin, of all things) and in the ensuing nightmare forgot that I posted it.
And I’m a bit ashamed of the typo in my OP.
I myself run around 97.4, NOT 95.4.
I think it’s intriguing that there are people who run that low, though.
I too am curious about Ruffian’s question about metabolic rates…I don’t know how to find out the answer to that question though. I myself have an above-average metabolism, I would suppose; I abuse it regularly and I’m within normal healthy weight parameters.
My mother, who also runs a bit cold, has struggled with her weight all her life; she’s never been obese, but she’s rarely been thin, and then only through truly herculean workout efforts and a rather frightening diet.
I don’t know if there’s a correlation to body temp and metabolic rate but I would be interested to find out. In my case I don’t think it’s an issue, but it would be a curious study.
FTR my feet are always freezing, though. Ask my boyfriend, who suffers.
Add to my curiosity of metabolic rates (that Audrey shares–btw, DeathLlama just corrected me; he ate ** 7 1/2** cinnamon rolls, the freak) a curiosity about an intolerance of heat. Of course this thread is purely anecdotal, but I was surprised by how many cannot tolerate the heat.
I absolutely can not take the heat, and overheat easily. Good thing I live where it hits 110 in summer. :rolleyes: I always have been heat intolerant, and as a junior higher I remember I had to quit the track team because running the two mile warmup in the heat and humidity made me terribly ill (heat exhaustion, not heat stroke, thankfully). I remember one time it so wrecked me, I couldn’t walk home from the bus stop and lay on a stranger’s lawn to try and cool (kind lady actually came out to check on me). It took me the rest of the afternoon and evening to recover.
Then again, I’ve managed to ride in horse shows in 100 degree weather, dressed in the wool hunt coat and high-necked show shirt, helmet, gloves, and tall boots. I prepare by drinking a gallon of water the day before, and at least 32oz before I get on the horse (plus a mister, eating juicy fruit, etc), so perhaps my issue had been not drinking enough water during my brief track team days and not my low body temp.
I was wondering about that, and a lot of the other numbers in this thread :dubious:. Reason being that I’m usually in the low 97s and it has always, without fail, since I was a child, drawn looks of consternation and comments from medical professionals. “We usually don’t see temperatures this low”, “let me make a note about this and give it to the doctor”, “we might need to do some more testing”, etc. I can’t imagine people running 95s and 96s and being told “no big deal”.
See, I can’t take cold weather. At all. If it drops below 50 I’m uncomfortable; if it drops below 30 I’m seriously pissed off and usually clenching every muscle in my body.
I’ve always chalked this up to growing up in South Texas, where the heat index routinely shimmers above 100 in summer. Heat I can take; it’s annoying and you sweat, but it isn’t painful, the way cold is.
Interesting.
I was charting basal body temperature for the purposes of determining ovulation. This is how I know I run cool basically, I know that my regular waking hours baseline is about 96.8 from other experience.