{"id":4644,"date":"2009-10-26T06:15:53","date_gmt":"2009-10-26T10:15:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/static\/?p=4644"},"modified":"2012-11-20T09:32:21","modified_gmt":"2012-11-20T14:32:21","slug":"cortisol-and-wind-turbines-wisconsin","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/2009\/cortisol-and-wind-turbines-wisconsin\/","title":{"rendered":"Cortisol and Wind Turbines (Wisconsin)"},"content":{"rendered":"
\u00b7<\/span> —Calvin Luther Martin, PhD, Editor<\/em><\/p>\n This posting is for people living near wind turbines.\u00a0 (Everyone else can ignore it.)\u00a0 It’s about a retired postal carrier and his cortisol levels.\u00a0 After Gerry Meyer retired from the Post Office he began a whole new and unexpected\u00a0career as a Wind Turbine Syndrome guinea pig.\u00a0 Sound familiar?\u00a0 (Read about his ordeal in The Brownsville Diaries<\/a> and Our Wildlife Have Disappeared<\/a>.)<\/p>\n At any rate, since the turbines started operating March 2008, he’s noticed his cortisol (stress hormone) levels fluctuating wildly.\u00a0 Of course at first he didn’t focus on cortisol—he’s not a clinician, after all.\u00a0 He merely knew his body was acting weirdly in a host of ways.\u00a0 Then, last spring (2009), Nina Pierpont urged him to get his cortisol checked.<\/p>\n So he did.\u00a0 And this is what he’s finding out.<\/p>\n First, by way of background, in his words:<\/p>\n <\/a> Gerry’s an active man.\u00a0 He spent his adult career as a rural mail carrier (check out those leg muscles). \u00a0He’s a gardener (see the picture).\u00a0 He’s a hunter.\u00a0 He’s a big four-wheeler fan.\u00a0 He’s someone who is pretty well tuned to what his body is feeling and doing.\u00a0 And he’s experiencing what are for him large weight swings.\u00a0 When the turbines are off for some days, his weight drops.\u00a0 When they’re on (which is most of the time), his weight shoots up.<\/p>\n Last spring, as I say, Nina Pierpont recommended he get his cortisol levels checked—ideally, if he could, comparing levels when turbines are off<\/em> to when they are on<\/em>.<\/p>\n Recently, none of the 86 industrial turbines were turning “for 14 hours short of 21 days.”\u00a0 For 20 days he and his family had peace and they felt fabulous, he reports.\u00a0 Alas, “they began turning again about 3:30 Sunday afternoon.”\u00a0 That was October 18.\u00a0 The following day he had his cortisol level checked.<\/p>\n “Today [October 23] the clinic called and told me the results.\u00a0 ‘Dramatically lower,’ the nurse told me.\u00a0 This time the number was 35 compared to 254 in July.”\u00a0 (By the way, he adds, “I lost 16 pounds during the shut-down period, without eating any differently.”)<\/p>\n “I believe\u00a0I can feel when my cortisol level is high, or the conditions are right for problems. My stomach feels full, yet I have the urge to eat. At the same time it feels like food is in my throat. This might seem strange, but that is what happens when my weight goes up. I am sure I am eating less, not snacking late at night and not eating much of Cheryl’s homemade-crust apple pie.”\u00a0 (Note:<\/em>\u00a0 Gerry, if you could send some of those apple pies to 19 Clay, Malone, I’d be much obliged.\u00a0 We don’t have to tell Nina, okay?)<\/p>\n Again, this posting is for people living in the shadow of wind turbines.\u00a0 Nina Pierpont suggests you start getting your cortisol levels checked, comparing levels when you’re away<\/em> from the turbines (or they’re turned off) to levels when you’re exposed<\/em>.\u00a0 Be consistent about the time of day you get your levels checked.<\/p>\n <\/a>
\n
\nWith appreciation to <\/span>healthjockey.com<\/span><\/a><\/span><\/p>\n\n
\nGerry Meyer, Wisconsin<\/span><\/p>\n
\nWith appreciation to <\/span>stanford.edu<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n