Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - Why is people's mood as unstable as the weather?

Why is people's mood as unstable as the weather?

First of all, gender-women are more sensitive.

Women are more aware of the weather changes, and they complain about the physical discomfort caused by the weather more often than men. The survey found that the perception difference of weather between men and women exists in almost all age groups. This difference increases with age and reaches the maximum when women enter menopause. After the age of 60, the difference between men's and women's reactions decreases accordingly.

For women, the biggest difference lies in fatigue, tension, sleep, disorder of blood circulation and autonomic nervous system, headache, depression and fear. Generally speaking, women are more sensitive to weather changes and have greater reaction intensity than men.

Second, age-middle-aged people have the strongest reaction.

Age is the most important factor to determine the intensity of weather change. Even babies and children will be affected by the weather. Their reactions to meteorological factors are mainly manifested as bad mood, fidgeting, crying, quarreling, fatigue, lack of interest in playing, poor sleep, diarrhea, vomiting and loss of appetite.

Statistics show that people's sensitivity to the weather is increasing in the first 20 years of their lives. About one-third of middle-aged people have obvious feelings about weather changes. When women reach menopause, about half will complain about the weather. But after the age of 60, the frequency of sensitivity to weather changes began to drop to between 30% and 50%. Third, physique-a direction that is still being studied in depth.

The strength of response to weather changes should be related to people's temperament and body fluids. Although people still think that the relationship between constitution types and weather is uncertain, in the past few decades, people have been trying to develop a bio-meteorological typology which is mainly based on constitution types and can be applied to psychiatry.

Fourth, personality-cowards should pay special attention.

If you find yourself more prone to emotional instability, pessimism, self-denial, irritability, excitability, shyness, difficulties in interpersonal communication, stage fright and depression than the average person, you will often feel the weather change more strongly than others.

Social class-the "two-headed" class is afraid of weather changes.

Social elites and the poor should be careful, because this high and low class, at both ends of society, is most vulnerable to the weather, while the middle class is least affected. In adverse weather, people in the upper class often have symptoms such as inattention, mood swings, heart and blood circulation diseases, aggravated pain and general unwillingness to work. People at the bottom often feel exhausted, exhausted, heart and circulatory disorders, rheumatism and fractures. The middle class is more likely to complain about fatigue and mistakes at work.