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Is It Possible To Be Hungover This Long

Is iT possible To have a hangover for 2 days?

Sweet Tressia,

There is no such a thing as a hangover. It is the Leftovers!!

Those wonderful things that are leftover from your time slamming shots, shooters and what ever swill you slammed down...

Ok ... What did you drink? The more flavorings and suger in the what you drink may have a huge effect on how you feel because normally you don't put that kind of stuff in your system and your system is not prepared for it. Especially when you are mixing the alcohol with it…
All three alcohols are poison to the human body, so after a good poisoning you may feel like crap for a long time. Did you drink lots of water? De-Hydration is the number one cause of feeling like doo doo after parting....

So!!! Drink Water, Drink Water, Drink Water …. Cuz Ur in the grove now peepee :)

How long should a hangover last?

On a night of heavy partying a hangover can last a few days.
Of just feeling fatigued and thirsty.
You may also have been hungover and then gotten sick.
Happened to me once, two days after a party I came down with the flu.
No doubtly got it from someone at the party.

If it persists though a week or so, go to the doctor I'd suggest. Just make sure you get rest and fluids and food. :)

How long does it take for a hangover to happen?

It really depends on several factors including how much you weigh, how much you drink, how fast you drink, the amount of food in your stomach, how much water you drink with it, and what you mixed with it. All these factors can also influence how bad your hangover is...The body metabolizes one standard drink per hour (one glass of wine, one shot of liquor, or one can of beer). Usually when one drinks only one (or two if you're a big guy), a hangover doesn't even happen. People generally feel fine with this moderate drinking (buzzed or tipsy). Heavy or binge drinking (more than two standard drinks an hour over a long time) usually results in a hangover. This usually occurs after you stop drinking and your body is working to metabolize the last bit of alcohol. You obviously won't feel hungover when you're asleep (knocked out). It hits you when you wake up. Sobering up before sleeping also helps prevent a hangover.

Is it possible to wake up still drunk from last night?

The first time I got drunk I was a college freshman and incredibly depressed and it was a Friday night and wow did I ever get drunk. I couldn't tell you how much I had to drink, because past a certain point, I don't remember much about what I was doing. I do remember wandering across campus finding more to drink after the first party broke up. And there was a bathroom that I managed to render unusable thanks to not being able to keep some of what I had had to drink down. Also, these girls in my hall had to let me crash in their room for a while until campus security showed up, because I couldn't find my keys.I was still drunk for most of Saturday, and sick with a brutal hangover all the way through all day Sunday. My dad still recalls this as a funny story because my parents called Sunday morning like usual, and feeling as awful as I did, I asked what he knew about alcohol poisoning and whether this might be that. (My parents were martini-after-work, wine-with-dinner drinkers, so they weren't upset that I was drinking off at college or anything.)I think I actually called in sick for a work shift Sunday night, and honestly, I was probably still kind of sick for a couple of days after that too.So, seriously: if you drink so much that you're still going to be drunk the next day, it will probably make your life very unhappy, as well as inconveniencing or even harming people around you. Don't go there on purpose; it's not actually cute or fun or a great rite of passage or anything, I promise. It's just dumb.

Why do I shiver when I'm hungover?

After a night of alcohol consumption, a drinker won't sleep as soundly as normal because the body is rebounding from alcohol's depressive effect on the system. When someone is drinking, alcohol inhibits glutamine, one of the body's natural stimulants. When the drinker stops drinking, the body tries to make up for lost time by producing more glutamine than it needs.

The increase in glutamine levels stimulates the brain while the drinker is trying to sleep, keeping them from reaching the deepest, most healing levels of slumber. This is a large contributor to the fatigue felt with a hangover. Severe glutamine rebound during a hangover also may be responsible for tremors, anxiety, restlessness and increased blood pressure.

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