Sounds like the flu or cold. Go see the doctor.
'I am feeling cold.' is correct if you are feeling cold.
When something is cold, receptors in the skin called thermoreceptors send signals to the brain indicating a drop in temperature. This triggers sensory nerve fibers to convey the sensation of cold to the brain, which is then interpreted as a feeling of chilliness or discomfort.
The hand detects temperature through nerve endings called thermoreceptors. These receptors send signals to the brain when they come into contact with hot or cold objects, allowing us to perceive the difference in temperatures. Our brain then processes this information and gives us the sensation of feeling hot or cold.
COLD
Some signs and symptoms may include: headache, a feeling of cold, numbness, dizziness, grogginess, shivering, cyanosis, tingling sensation, stiffness in arms and legs, low blood pressure, excess shivering, pale skin, change in consciousness, slow reflexes, seizures, and of course, low body temperature.
When a person rubs their hands together on a cold day, friction is generated between their hands. This friction creates heat, helping to warm up the hands and increase blood flow, which can help alleviate the feeling of cold.
Hearing nails on a chalkboard, watching a horror movie, or feeling a sudden gust of cold wind can send shivers down my spine.
Many people experience their hands feeling cold non stop. There are many different reasons this could be happening. Vitamin deficiencies, auto immune diseases, and poor blood circulation, are the most common causes.
A mildly cold feeling is when you experience a slight chill or shiver on your skin, but it is not intense or uncomfortable. It may make you feel slightly cool or refreshed without being overly cold.
Most of the time, nose tingling is the result of allergies or the common cold. Sometimes the tingling sensation directly precedes a sneeze, and other times the tingling comes and goes off and on throughout the day. People who experience migraine headaches occasionally complain of nose tingling as well. In more serious cases, nose tingling is a side effect of multiple sclerosis or other health problems relating to nerve damage. If a person experiencing a tingling nose sensation does not have any other symptoms relating to a cold, allergies, or migraine headache, she should probably see her doctor to find out if anything more serious is causing the tingling.
It (and your blood pressure) gradually returns to your normal resting rate. Unless you start feeling crushing pains, running through to your back, you get dizzy, pale, cold, clammy and tingling in your left arm, then I suggest you call an ambulance.