{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "how did you arrive at creatine as the solution, was it a craving or something like that", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/712001470732664832/", "html": "<div class=\"question\"><strong>Anonymous</strong> asked: <p>how did you arrive at creatine as the solution, was it a craving or something like that</p></div>\n<p>It first struck all at once when I was in my bedroom at the end of the night, I struggled to bed, fell asleep, and was still so weak on waking my resting breath didn&rsquo;t completely cycle the air in my lungs, so I manually took deep breaths.</p><p>That made me feel marginally better so I tried hyperventilating, that made me feel marginally better yet, enough to struggle to the kitchen.</p><p>I grabbed a few chunks of dried pineapple to eat and that made me even marginally better still, but I was still absolutely feeble.</p><p>I had a clever generalist&rsquo;s understanding of things, though. </p><p>&ldquo;Huh, more oxygen helps\u2026 more blood sugar helps\u2026 but even together they&rsquo;re not enough. This sounds like an issue with <i>aerobic energy generation</i>.&rdquo;</p><p>And I knew that creatine enables anaerobic energy generation from fat, which can be drawn on when energy demand exceeds aerobic capacity, and I had some on hand and I thought &ldquo;may as well try&rdquo;, so moving as if gravity was 3 times as strong I took a few scoops in a cup of water, shook it up, gulped down, a few minutes later I did in fact feel better so I did it again and I was back to normal.</p><p>And then I mad scientist laughed my <i>ass</i> off, I&rsquo;m <i><b>extremely</b></i> proud of that one, made me feel like Batman reasoning his way out of the Riddler&rsquo;s trap.</p>"}