I seem to sweat more than the rest of my class mates, when doing throwing/ taking drills in the past I have dripped onto the person I am working with - YUK! I am not excessively over weight, but I am Scottish (racial stereotyping warning) so might want to get my subscription fees worth (well did warn you). The rest of the time it would not be possible to launch the Broughty Ferry lifeboat down my back just during dojo time. Is it a food diet thing? T.I.A.
2007-01-15
23:36:29
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10 answers
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asked by
northcarrlight
6
in
Health
➔ Diet & Fitness
My BP is the classic 120/80, my resting heart rate has dropped from 52 to 50 bpm, diet weak possible but who can say these days due to conflicting reports
2007-01-16
00:18:28 ·
update #1
Everything has a cure on the net. There is a drug created for everything! Forget ethnicity - it is normal for some people to drip - we are actually healthy to do so. I used to ask my parents the same thing. Why me? My father had the same issues. He put my feet into a cold water bath every night for months. Recommended a cold shower after body bathing. The sweating became less severe. I could still go to a gym and see others who didn't sweat as much but they turned redder. I asked my doctor and he said that my sweating was healthier than their rosy dry skin. He suggested adding Epsom salts to the bath, liked the cold rinse showers and said use lots of talcum powder. Have always had more skin blemishes, etc but I control those more with a balanced diet. I carry 'drip' towels for mowing the lawn, etc. and gave up apologizing a long time ago.
BTW - animals sweat, men perspire, and women glow.
2007-01-16 00:06:31
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answer #1
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answered by Quest 6
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This is the same technique I have taught over 138,000 men and women in 157 countries to successfully treat their excessive sweating condition over the past 7 years!
Remember: Watch the whole video, as the ending will pleasantly surprise you�
2016-05-20 03:11:35
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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There probably isn't anything wrong its just that you're in a room of people who don't work as hard as you.
A colleague of mine is extremely fit (elite athlete) and sweats buckets!!! There is litlerally a puddle underneath the cross trainer or studio bike wherever he worked out.
His body is simply very efficient at cooling him down (which is what sweating is all about), so I really wouldn't worry about it.
Make sure you top up your fluids though. You're bound to dehydrate if you sweat a lot and water alone may not rehydrate you sufficiently, so I would recommend you have an isotonic drink containing maltodextrin, to top up your electrolytes again.
Keep at it.
2007-01-16 00:33:54
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answer #3
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answered by Placebo 3
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A good rule of thumb: "When in doubt, as your Dr."
A lot of people sweat more than others. For me, I was in grade school and sweated a lot. It's just the way my body was made. But, if this is bothering you, talk to your Dr. I'm sure they may have some suggestions. It's worth asking.
2007-01-15 23:50:30
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answer #4
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answered by Voice 4
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Thanks for the warning about racial stereo typing (laughing guiltily as I speak) some peole are just made that way, my thoughts are that you are keen to improve in your sport so work hard. Stay focused on what you want to do and experiment with taking a cooler shower before the class (?) to see if that works
2007-01-16 20:54:10
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answer #5
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answered by katrina2971 3
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From one Scot to another, you are doing nothing wrong. Do you drink a lot of water? If someone drinks a lot of liquids, especially water they seem to sweat more, releasing the water they have consumed.
I wasn't born in Scotland but my half of our family comes mainly from Inverness and the Highlands. My husband comes from Australia and England.
Marcus has the right idea.
2007-01-15 23:48:14
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answer #6
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answered by greylady 6
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Lots of people sweat excessively, and there are a number of things they can do to treat this, so the best place to start is at your doctors. Also, there is a web site that is dedicated to this problem, type Excessive Sweating into google and you will find it easily.
2007-01-15 23:46:05
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answer #7
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answered by sparkleythings_4you 7
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Diaphoresis (Excessive sweating) can be a hormonal thing and can be controlled by drugs. Atropine I think is one of them. There may also be dietary factors affecting it as well like excessive salt in the food etc.
Your GP can help.
2007-01-15 23:47:19
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answer #8
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answered by The Alchemist 4
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it fairly is the comparable technique I even have taught over 138,000 adult males and ladies in 157 international locations to effectively take care of their intense sweating difficulty over the final 7 years! submit to in ideas: Watch the entire video, because of the fact the ending will pleasantly marvel you�
2016-10-31 06:09:40
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answer #9
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answered by arrocha 4
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could be high blood pressure
2007-01-15 23:41:00
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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