..I also have Raynaud's syndrome. I wear socks in bed almost all year round. My hands and feet go grey regularly. They really do look dead sometimes.
We were chatting while you were in the kitchen Sylvia
You`re a bit late. Crumbs are all that`s left. xx
Ah, but who ate the last piece - and what sort of cake was it?You`re a bit late. Crumbs are all that`s left. xx
Ah, but who ate the last piece - and what sort of cake was it?
I have Raynaud's, even on a hot day getting into a car that's been in the shade means my fingers go white and I can't drive for a short while, in the winter when I clear the paths of ice, they go navy blue.
If I was an ex-coal miner I'd get a pension for it.
I'm a hot water bottle person, I like the cold sheets but warm feet (I've had socks on for bed for the last three nights, when we were younger I used to wear so much for bed Peter used to ask 'How will I get in?')
With me it's the impatience of having to wait until the feeling comes back.
Sometimes, in winter, it can be a bit painful.
It happens when I go down the fridge aisles in supermarkets, a buzz in your fingers and toes and like Sue says, when you look at your fingers, half of them look deed!
It`s strange Win. I have an under active thyroid and take Thyroxine , have cold feet but the rest of me is warm.
Raynaud’s sounds painful and also debilitating. I had heard of it but had no idea it was so serious it affects your life.