As a people, we have become obsessed with Health. There is something fundamentally, radically unhealthy about all this. We do not seem to be seeking more exuberance in living as much as staving off failure, putting off dying. We have lost all confidence in the human body. Lewis Thomas, The Medusa and the Snail, 1979
Headaches - Controlling Headaches Through Choices
While you cannot completely control getting or wiping out the pain of headaches there are things that you can do to help the situation. Understanding and avoiding the things that trigger headaches will go a long way in alleviating pain. Making good lifestyle choices based on reducing the likelihood of headaches is also a positive first step.
Posture is one of the most common contributors to headache pain, if not the actual cause, and one of the easiest to control. Though it requires self-reminding and discipline, it's possible to make long-term changes to optimize posture and minimize headaches. Good posture helps keep muscles from tensing at the wrong time and in the wrong ways. It supports the skeleton and allows for efficient movement.
When standing, avoid standing for long periods with more weight on one foot than the other. A balanced stance allows for freedom of movement in any direction and avoids selective tension that can cause spinal misalignment. That misalignment is a common contributor to the causes of headaches.
Similar considerations apply to sitting. Sit up straight, but not so straight as to be over-tense. If working at the computer, keep the forearms straight ahead and the shoulders squared, with both feet flat on the floor. If you tend to have one foot up on the chair base, at least switch feet from time to time.
Stretch regularly. Keep the muscles loose and blood flowing well by gentle stretching on a regular basis throughout the day. In the morning, when muscles are more likely to be cold and stiff, ease into it especially slowly. Blood carries in nutrients and takes away used biochemical products. Warm, limber muscles helps optimize that process.
Stress is another major contributor to headaches. Even when not the direct cause, it can up the odds of getting one and worsen an existing headache. Before reaching for the drugs, practice some simple methods for minimizing stress.
Keep in mind that stress is a combination of internal and external factors. It isn't just potentially unpleasant events that produce stress, but the evaluation of your own ability to deal with them. Stress is neither 'all in the mind', nor solely due to external circumstances. So the solution isn't 'mind over matter' nor avoiding all potentially unpleasant situations.
Regular exercise and a good diet help reduce existing stress and decrease the odds of it occurring. Meditation techniques are helpful to many, though even just a few minutes of quiet deep breathing and focus on a peaceful memory can help considerably.
Lack of sleep is one of the potential triggers of migraine and other forms of headache. Get plenty of rest. Sleep deprivation can accumulate over time and it contributes to and heightens stress as well. Sometimes it's necessary to push, but a lifestyle that precludes adequate sleep is unhealthy. Headaches are one inevitable result.
Even mild depression can trigger headaches as well as intensify the pain. Controlling depression will help to reduce the occurrence and severity of headaches. Combating depression with drugs and/or therapy is a wise and healthy choice and will have an impact on headaches.
Kroger employees treated for headaches (The Times of Northwest Indiana) GREENWOOD, Ind. - A Greenwood Kroger store has reopened and 15 employees who were treated for possible carbon monoxide poisoning have been released from the hospital.
Overweight kids likely to have more headaches, study finds (USA Today) Stress, dehydration and hormonal irregularities could be among the reasons behind this finding.
Is next-gen datacenter tech worth the headaches? (InfoWorld) Recent research shows IT executives worry the challenges associated with implementing and maintaining next-generation datacenter technologies such as virtualization and power consumption controls could outweigh the potential benefits. Separate surveys found that IT executives and high-tech managers are concerned over their ability to both manage virtual operations and maintain the ...
Overweight kids likely to have more headaches, study finds (Detroit Free Press) The more overweight children and teenagers are, the more frequent and disabling their headaches, according to the first national study to look at possible links between obesity and headaches in kids.
Overweight Kids Suffer More Headaches (FOX 7 WTVW Evansville) Getting obese kids to slim down could get rid of some major headaches. "USA Today" is reporting that Cincinnati Children's Hospital has conducted the first national study to find a link between childhood obesity and chronic headaches.
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