Hormone testing is nowhere close to being accurate. Hormones are in a constant state of fluctuation. Where there are one minute can change in a heartbeat. So they only give you a window to that exact time. Basing a diagnosis on symptoms is a lot more useful.
I also see in your other posts that your rT3 is elevated. This is reverse triiodothyronine. The hormone rT3 is structurally similar to T3, but is biologically inactive. So it locks up the T3 receptors preventing the body from using its own T3, which is the most biologically active hormone. Poor adrenal function and high stress can raise rT3 levels.