This could be a variety of reasons: fatigue, nausea, pregnancy signs, vertigo, hypoglycemia, Diabetes, dehydration, concussion or other head injuries.
If you are experiencing this regularly, it would be best to visit the doctor
Gravity holds us down.
The acid with "bad" air in the stomach goes up and up that blocks the breathing system . When the "bad" air goes up it will go to the head and make us feel dizzy.
The atmosphere is spinning with us. _________________ If you don't feel wind, ever, you are not on earth. The atmosphere is spinning with the earth, but the spin of the earth does have some effect on the atmosphere. Remember that the estimate of 1000 miles per hour is for the region around the equator; the velocity reduces to zero as you approach the poles.
The spinning of our word on its axis of rotation (which passes through the geographical north and south poles).
We get dizzy if we don't eat there us no energy in our body to do work and our body gets restless
Have you ever ridden on a carousel? While you're riding on the wooden horse, you feel as if you are sitting still, while the world spins around you. Same illusion here; the Earth is big, and you don't FEEL it spinning; it FEELS as if you are standing still. But SOMETHING is moving, and so we see the Sun rising and setting. Except that the Sun doesn't rise and set; the Sun is in the center. It's the Earth spinning. We don't feel it spinning, so if "feels like" the Sun is moving. But it's really us.
The moon rotates around the earth, and as it does so, our view of it makes it appear to 'rise' and 'set,' though really it's just spinning around us.
For example, if the wallet is removed, our perception still causes us to feel the wallet's presence.
Samuel Slater
The moon rotates around the earth, and as it does so, our view of it makes it appear to 'rise' and 'set,' though really it's just spinning around us.
It tells us how fast it is spinning.
batista has it