You wrote:
"Anybody else have input on this topic of weather creating issues for those of us with PCS?"
It is certainly true for me, subtropic here on the Gulf Coast South. I actually live just up the Bay a little ways from where it meets the Gulf of Mexico. When the
barometric pressure is falling, just as you say, even mildly say a couple days before a storm, I'm "in malaise", as we might say. I know that there's a change, in me, and then I look at wunderground and the barometric pressure confirmed is falling. When the storm is actually here, I feel a change to the better, to homeostasis, yes.
Our physical bodies are long-known to be "a part of the greater whole" and science confirms that. It's no different than "Old Uncle Wiggley" and his rheumatism when many of us were kids. Grins.
Yes, Mark, now that I've acquired asthma recently as well (and I've never liked humidity) --- being from Colorado (beautifully high & dry, e.g. like Idaho) --- I have often thought of how/if I might in fact feel/do/be/recover more fully/better were I able to go home to Colorado to live. However at this time, I'm in no condition financially or otherwise to make any such changes in my location. And it is Autumn now here, the humidity is gone, and it's simply spectacular and easy living here on out from now through April. So, I'll ponder again this Winter, just how I might manage to become an annually migrating snowbird next year before next May!
Theta
P.S. I do not always experience 'malaise' with each and every time barometric pressure falling. By 'malaise' I am speaking for myself of specifically physical discomfort, physical pains, physical changes and such. Clear? I cannot make any correlations myself with for example, "more foggy-brain", etc.