Did it do the job?
For me, sweetie, none of them do the job if the seas are 4' or over. I just hope to have less 'bouts' so I can dive . . . once under the waves, I'm fine.
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Did it do the job?
For me, sweetie, none of them do the job if the seas are 4' or over. I just hope to have less 'bouts' so I can dive . . . once under the waves, I'm fine.
@Kevrumbo: I'm not aware of people experiencing any drug tolerance issues when using something like meclizine...occasionally...as an anti-seasickness med. Are you?So what do you do when y'all start developing the real possibility of a drug tolerance to all these medications?
You're better off starting with and developing "psychosomatic tolerance" for motion sickness over time by using cognitive methods instead. . .
I wonder, too, how much the placebo effect contributes to the success of medications and home remedies for motion sickness. I have watched many times someone out on a deep sea fishing trip have an instantaneous recovery from seasickness when someone shoves a rod and reel into their hands with a sailfish on the line.So what do you do when y'all start developing the real possibility of a drug tolerance to all these medications?
You're better off starting with and developing "psychosomatic tolerance" for motion sickness over time by using cognitive methods instead. . .
Or let them pilot the boat. Makes them focus on watching the horizon and takes their mind off of their gut. I raised by daughter to not fall for it, worked well when she was a kid but later she bought into it. She gets ill on car trips, so then she takes a turn driving - all better.I wonder, too, how much the placebo effect contributes to the success of medications and home remedies for motion sickness. I have watched many times someone out on a deep sea fishing trip have an instantaneous recovery from seasickness when someone shoves a rod and reel into their hands with a sailfish on the line.
There is a psychosomatic component to seasickness. As a former sufferer, I know that if you are sitting there constantly monitoring the state of your gut, thinking about being sick and dreading every wave, you will get sick. And if you have a friend who is susceptible to it, the worst thing you can do to them is to keep asking them how they feel.
And lots of medications designed to combat motion sickness do it by dulling your response to everything. That's not good.Or let them pilot the boat. Makes them focus on watching the horizon and takes their mind off of their gut. I raised by daughter to not fall for it, worked well when she was a kid but later she bought into it. She gets ill on car trips, so then she takes a turn driving - all better.
For her Cozumel day stop, I didn't think I could get the snorkel Op to go for that, so I booked them on a trimaran. That worked too, but I got to wonder if it worked in part because I told her it would.
I am aware of divers here in SoCal who've been using the Scopolamine patch regularly for years and are now finding it less effective for even a day trip, let alone a whole weekend liveaboard offshore. . .@Kevrumbo: I'm not aware of people experiencing any drug tolerance issues when using something like meclizine...occasionally...as an anti-seasickness med. Are you?
For conditions like seasickness, cognitive methods (including various forms of self-hypnosis) don't always work for every person.