So, anyone know if I can take Zyrtec after having taken Zicam?
Yup. Zicam is zinc, not a drug, so there's no danger of an interaction.
Kaylee ,'Out Of Gas'
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
So, anyone know if I can take Zyrtec after having taken Zicam?
Yup. Zicam is zinc, not a drug, so there's no danger of an interaction.
Heh. I was just coming to ask the all-powerful Steph a med question myself.
Can I rotate taking ibuprofen and Ultracet (Tramadol and acetaminophen), so I'm taking one every three hours? Or, do I need to call and ask my PCP this? My chiro recommended it, but said to check online or with PCP first. I can't find helpful info online, and I'm really trying to make it more than three day without paging the PCP.
That poster in the article Vortex linked to talks about indoors-to-outdoors behaviour editing that she engages in. Do the straight folk here engage in that too? Or do you stare at your SO in public the same way you'd want to in private?
I'm generally the same indoors and out except for lowing my voice where necessary.
One old flame and I loved the South Park movie so much, we got the soundtrack and listened to it at home repeatedly. We were shocked however, to be singing 'Uncle Fucka' in a parking lot at roughly the same volume as at home. Oops.
But as far as longing glances, hand holding and inoffensive kissing? indoors = outdoors.
Can I rotate taking ibuprofen and Ultracet (Tramadol and acetaminophen), so I'm taking one every three hours?
Yes. If you need to do that for longer than a few days, though, definitely call your doctor. (Not because of the drug combo; because of the pain levels.)
I do not, but because I am hugely anti PDA, not because I have any fear or discomfort. I think nothing of holding hands or kissing hello or goodbye, and it makes me sad that others have to think about it.
I think nothing of holding hands or kissing hello or goodbye, and it makes me sad that others have to think about it.
I was out to dinner with my best friend and some other friends, among whom was a gay couple. One of the couple is a doctor who had to go to work after dinner, so when he left, he and his partner hugged, and said, "See you at home," and it struck me so strongly that they have to think about whether even a hug was safe to do in a busy restaurant. It makes me so sad, too.
Yes. If you need to do that for longer than a few days, though, definitely call your doctor. (Not because of the drug combo; because of the pain levels.)
K. I'm really hoping that if I take it really easy and dope myself up all weekend that by Monday I'll feel more like myself again. This flare-up is hanging on longer than usual for me, but I'm pretty sure it's partially because I keep pushing myself to keep performing at a higher level than I should be, even though I feel like crap.
I've never been a PDA kind of girl (even in straight relationships), so it's hard to say whether I experience this or not. I know that when we're out in the evening at a club or show or something I get a little huggy and I sometimes wonder if others are watching and judging. Not that I really care, but it does suck when it's something you'd never think about in a hetero relationship. I mostly hate the constantly coming out. Every time you start a new job or meet a new person you know it's coming - and it's annoying and sometimes a bit stressful.
I think I treat boyfriends and girlfriends pretty much the same in public. I tend to be pretty oblivious of how my behavior effects strangers around me.