You could try...patalebonMarch 20 2010, 21:06:22 UTC
If the problem is that you can't breathe, then take Zyrtec with the NyQuil (assuming that you have the original formula - you know the one you can't get without going through the pharmacist.)
Zyrtec (or Claratin) can be mixed with Sudafed. (Assuming that you follow the dosages for both.) It has helped me in the past when I couldn't breathe.
And plot holes make great ideas for more fanfics! ;)
Re: You could try...willowscryMarch 21 2010, 03:54:11 UTC
That wasn't exactly the problem (though it helped when Joey finally moved so the fan could move some air my way).
And that sounds dangerous no matter how you put it. ^.^' The coughing just gets stuck in my throat, like there's something in it, but there's nothing to get rid of.
Actually, it's more the fact I wrote the same scene twice (I kind of forgot I'd written it in an earlier chapter) so I claimed it was from a different POV - which is correct in a way.
Re: You could try...patalebonMarch 21 2010, 12:06:19 UTC
It's what my doctor (and Goofy's) have told us to do when our allergies get really bad.
The problem is with allergy medication now being available over the counter, those of us who only occasionally need something stronger end up fighting the insurance people over it. This is a way to get something stronger without having to fight anyone over it. Well, excepting the fact that Sudafed is getting close to becoming a controlled substance...
Comments 3
Zyrtec (or Claratin) can be mixed with Sudafed. (Assuming that you follow the dosages for both.) It has helped me in the past when I couldn't breathe.
And plot holes make great ideas for more fanfics! ;)
Reply
And that sounds dangerous no matter how you put it. ^.^' The coughing just gets stuck in my throat, like there's something in it, but there's nothing to get rid of.
Actually, it's more the fact I wrote the same scene twice (I kind of forgot I'd written it in an earlier chapter) so I claimed it was from a different POV - which is correct in a way.
Reply
The problem is with allergy medication now being available over the counter, those of us who only occasionally need something stronger end up fighting the insurance people over it. This is a way to get something stronger without having to fight anyone over it. Well, excepting the fact that Sudafed is getting close to becoming a controlled substance...
Reply
Leave a comment