>
> Working under a car gives me nausea so quick the intestinal part doesn't
> get a chance to become an issue. My usual routine was work twenty
minutes,
> throw up for five, work anothey twenty, /ad nauseum/, so to speak.
>
> In my case it's creeping vertigo, struck first when I was about 55 years
> old. My doctor says there's no need to worry: no known cure. A co-worker
> said her mother had vertigo 100% of the time, not just when crawling
(face
> up, right?) under cars. The mother takes Dramamine before any occasion
> where it's im****tant to not fall down or throw up.
>
> I've been trying it for the past few sway-bar changes: don't eat for a
> couple hours before a session, take a Dramamine tablet half-an-hour
> before. So far, still get some of the sensations, but no up-chucking
> during a couple two-hour jobs.
>
> Of course I know a person for whom entering a library building acts like
a
> laxative. Ten minutes inside and it's off to the bathroom. What do you
> suppose /that's/ all about?
>
> --
> Frank ess
> sandy eggo CA
elevator music was invented to combat vertigo. Maybe you could pipe some
into your garage.
>


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