Shadrach Loom
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/...atigue-fast-tips-health-advice-2023-6c886m3hb
Unpaywalled: https://archive.ph/mklII
GET gets a plug, too.
As an occasional reader, I’ve been deeply irked by the Times’s vertiginous transformation into a Daily Mail lookalike under Tony Gallagher’s abominable stewardship, and now health coverage is going the way of its political and social commentary.
But all papers, I guess, are vulnerable to PR from proselytisers who were misdiagnosed and then decided - as they all do, apparently - to write a sodding book.
Unpaywalled: https://archive.ph/mklII
Eventually, Antram was diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome — extreme exhaustion that affects as many as 250,000 people in the UK — and resigned again, this time taking several months off to recuperate.
That proved to be not only a turning point for Antram, now 38, but a wake-up call to what she believes is an “epidemic of tiredness” plaguing the country. According to a recent YouGov study, one in four of us feel fatigued “most of the time” and one in eight say they feel “tired all the time”.
With little helpful guidance from her GP, Antram took it upon herself to find the root cause of her fatigue, identifying what she calls her “energy leaks” — or the things causing her to feel drained — in each area of her life. She overhauled her largely “beige” diet with foods that nourished her gut microbiome, mixed restorative yoga sessions with gym workouts, developed a new sleep routine and was so struck by her success that she switched professions — retraining and qualifying as a nutritionist.
Now, she has written a book, Fix Your Fatigue, which she hopes will help everyone, from the generally weary to the chronically fatigued.
GET gets a plug, too.
As an occasional reader, I’ve been deeply irked by the Times’s vertiginous transformation into a Daily Mail lookalike under Tony Gallagher’s abominable stewardship, and now health coverage is going the way of its political and social commentary.
But all papers, I guess, are vulnerable to PR from proselytisers who were misdiagnosed and then decided - as they all do, apparently - to write a sodding book.