Skip to content

31 Comments

  1. Jonathan Wagar
    16 January 2010 @ 11:13 am

    I find this to be very interesting. I have been curious about many of the more isoteric symptons that come with migraines. I am a man with a very strong belief in the meta physics and paranormal stuff. I have been interested in this sort of thing for just a little longer than I have had migraines (I have had a constant migraine for nearly 15 years now). I have had many OBE experiences and many other the other things that were mentioned above. My curiosity had always been that the migraines were more caused by the OBE’s and what not. Not the other way around. That I am not in any way an isolated case is fascinating to me. It never ceases to amaze me that the more we study the body, particularly the brain, the more we find questions that many of us do not really want to except the answers.

    Reply

  2. Severt Nielsen
    1 February 2010 @ 8:11 am

    My wife has suffered with aura migraines for 25 years. In the early years she would have several aura episodes a year, then went for many years with just 3 or 4 episodes a year. Now, she is have these aura experiences just about every week with the headaches to follow of course. Here in the last couple of years she has been experiencing what she describes as a “disconnected” feeling at times and sometimes she says it feels like a rubber band has just been popped in her head. Of course these episodes are very frightening for her. I’d be very grateful to anyone who could point me in right direction to get my wife some relief.

    Reply

    • jay l.
      3 January 2011 @ 1:30 am

      I hope this makes sense. I have had the feeling of flying out of my body during some migraines. I found that holding my husband’s hand or arm made me feel more grounded. Holding certain stones also seemed to ease the feeling that I am being pulled out of my body.

      Reply

  3. unreported_experience
    5 February 2010 @ 4:43 am

    I began taking medication for migraines at age four. They diagnosed me with migraines without aura, but I realized much later in life I just thought aura symptoms were normal, and at that point didn’t want to mention them as they would just disturb my parents and not me. I remember often feeling as if I was about 3 inches above and to the left of my body, except for my head which seemed attached. I would also frequently cling to covers of my bed to avoid falling off, as there was no amount of reason that could convince my mind it wasn’t turned sideways; alternatively I would black out and then see pretty yellow lights floating round and get this incredible fuzzy feeling that I dearly miss to this day since my migraines went away in adulthood. I thought I could feel the world turning lol; I can easily see in more life threatening circumstances with adrenaline and other things playing part people believing they’re on the way to heaven/ hell and leaving their body behind

    Reply

  4. tania o connor
    18 September 2010 @ 5:35 pm

    Thank god i’m not the only person experiencing this strange feeling, after every migraine attack i have there is a period of time where its as though there are two of me in the same body or maybe a better way to explain it is that my soul hasn’t re-attached to my body properly?!? when i move a part of my body it’s like another part of me is trying to catch up with that movement in slow motion, like a double exposure. Its the strangest feeling. I would love an explanation for this.

    Reply

    • jay l.
      3 January 2011 @ 1:20 am

      I can’t explain why, but I experience the same thing. I have to move very gingerly because some of my energy flaps around like long hair. I find it comforting to sit on the ground or walk barefoot outside.

      Reply

  5. Amy S
    1 January 2011 @ 8:49 pm

    I was diagnosed with migraines when I was about eight years old after seizures were ruled out. I can remember lying in bed, and having the feeling of being on a merry-go-round above my bed. It was a fantastic sensation of peace and calm; it alerted me that I was about to fall asleep. I can’t in all honestly, say if a migraine ever followed or preceded.

    It wasn’t until I was in my twenties that I even heard of an OBE, let alone associated the two. I’d always assumed that it was a normal experience that no one ever talked about.

    Reply

  6. joseph
    20 March 2011 @ 1:54 pm

    telling this kind of experience even to the most understanding doctor can be very sobering. I have migraines in which I begin to be aware of various different realities. They are very real and happen simultaneously. But when I try to follow them, I realize that it is not a concrete reality. I try hard to hang onto what I know is a reality, but sometimes the other streams of reality invade and you don’t realize it. And then after 4 hours or so it is over. Very alarming and frightening. I have just gone through extensive tests including 4 MRIs which showed that everything is totally normal. A very healthy guy with strange migraines. I have recently started using an NTI device and I think it is helping a lot. So interested in others experiences.

    Reply

  7. viv
    20 October 2011 @ 3:51 am

    I myself experience such things along with my frequent (& severe) migraines.
    Oftentimes the people around me will ask “what are you looking at? are you okay?” and I have the strange sensation that I’m not inside my body at all, but in a sort of tunnel in front of myself.
    I also have NOT told people about this, because I was worried of their reaction. I tell those who ask me if I’m ‘ok’ that I’m *zoned out*.

    Maybe it’s a pain response? Or perhaps the pain is a response to this occurance?

    Reply

  8. Heather
    2 December 2011 @ 3:00 pm

    Wow. Years ago I asked my doctor if one migraine symptom was feeling like there was a dream world going on right next to me, or behind a closed door. It’s happened a few times in the intervening years, as if another reality is operating very close by.

    In recent years, persistent deja vu is one of my signals that a migraine is imminent in the next couple of days. I will feel constant deja vu for several minutes.

    Reply

  9. Joseph McClain
    2 December 2011 @ 8:22 pm

    and I have to say wow, too, Heather. I know exactly what you are talking about. It came to a crisis situation for me last year on Christmas day and continued for months after that. For that reason I am working hard on myself not to dread this season. But is was scary.I am working on a book in which that period is a major piece. If you want I will send it to you. Let me know. My email: josephmcclain2@hotmail.com. EVERYONE LET’S KEEP COMMUNICATING…AT LEAST FOR ME THIS IS IMPORTANT.

    Reply

  10. Rich
    29 July 2013 @ 11:38 am

    I’m not sure if anyone is still responding to this thread, but I was diagnosed with silent migraine by my neurologist. I have very strong auras without the pain. That said, I still get intense migraine induced vertigo, violent, split-second OBEs, and auditory hallucinations. Turns out ALL of these symptoms occur over the top of my temporal lobes. Because OBEs are also associated with this area of the brain, this should not be considered an uncommon occurence if other symptoms in the same neurological region exist. My neurologist explained it this way: normal migraines proceed from the back of the brain (visual cortex) and cause visual disturbances – then travel over the brain causing crushing pain – then finally to the frontal lobe causing problems with thinking and processing – followed by fatigue. In my case, instead of advancing over the top of my brain, the disturbance is wrapping around the sides – causing the balance, hallucination, OBE issues. Hope that helps!

    Reply

  11. Joseph McClain
    31 July 2013 @ 1:00 pm

    Thanks, Rich, for your post. This is all really helpful. Let’s do keep this thread going because even some other migrainuers look at me like I have lost mind when I talk about these kind of events. QUESTION FOR ANYONE and EVERYONE; Has any kind of medicine or anything else been helpful for you? How do you treat one of these migraines while it is happening? Thanks.

    Reply

  12. Rich
    31 July 2013 @ 1:12 pm

    It may be helpful to refer any of your friends who may think you are crazy to this wikipedia article on the temporoparietal junction: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temporoparietal_junction

    It clearly indicates that the area is associated with OBEs and provides peer-reviewed research to support it. As far as medication, I have only been presecribed topamax, which by my understanding, is a normal migraine medication that only reduces the number of times the symptoms occur (but doesn’t eliminate them entirely). It’s too early to know if it’s having any effect yet. My dosage is low and pretty recent. I’ll repost if I have any significant changes. I’m also interested to hear if anyone is on something specific that seems to work.

    Reply

  13. Claireliza
    27 September 2013 @ 5:48 pm

    I get into a trance like state when trying to sleep through a migraine. I am neither fully awake nor fully asleep. My body is on the bed but I am usually hovering above or to the side. I try to open my eyes but they are too heavy, I try to get back into my body but I cant.

    Reply

  14. chris hinkins
    28 September 2013 @ 5:15 am

    I’m now 60 and have suffered from migraines since age 13. Headaches last anything from an hour to several days. Over the years the prelinimanary symptoms have gradually changed. I used to get the classic ‘jagged-edged hole in the vision’. Few years ago had wierd episode where nothing seemed real and words I was reading made no sense. Migraine headache followed within an hour or so. Just been away on quite stressful trip, and had several episodes when felt swimmy, and as if watching myself from a distance. Migraine headache has come on this morning, so am assuming they are linked. My mother used to say when she was working as a typist, she was inclined to type words backwards before a headache

    Reply

  15. Neeruam
    26 November 2013 @ 3:09 pm

    In my early 20’s I started having these strange waves of sensations where my body would heat up, I’d start to get light headed, and feel sort of raised over or out of my body, while feeling a horrible wave of anxiety. These episodes became more and more frequent and eventually progressed to full migraine. During an episode of migraine these waves or outer body sensations come and go for up to 36hrs. They last a few minutes at a time, and even wake me up while I’m sleeping. During an episode I am aware of my surroundings and what is going on but am unable to communicate properly. Words get mixed up, or I feel like I know what I want to say but it just won’t come out of my mouth. I am now 30 and suffer from migraine roughly every month. It has severely affected my memory, particularly my short term memory. For a few days before a migraine I have a lot of dejavu, and my mind fells slower and Im less capable of multi tasking and concentrating. I have tried a few different medications, but none have really helped. One seemed to help ease the horrible feeling of fear or anxiety, but had no effect on the rest of the migraine symptoms.
    I have seen a couple of different Doctors and Consultants. A lot of whom seem to be in disbelief of my symptoms. I guy told me there was nothing that could be done to help. The most recent consultant I am seeing has told me that in no doubt I am suffering from migraine but my symptoms / aura or wave I experience and the way it comes and goes is not typical.
    Good to hear I am not alone. If any is doing research in the area I would be more than willing to help. It is very debilitating and effects all aspects of my life. Pain I can live with but the effect on my memory and function is horrible and makes life very difficult.

    Reply

  16. janice
    29 December 2013 @ 5:15 pm

    I have suffered with migraines since i was a teen.In my mdd 40s now. Over the years they have changed and are never predictable or caused by food triggers. If sometimes left untreated I can get a terrible feeling of being in a another time in place, usually back to the 1970s and it is so hard to explain,its like i know where i am but iam also in the past, I hate this feeling. However it is good to finely know i am not alone.

    Reply

  17. Katy
    28 July 2014 @ 1:15 am

    I have OBE ‘s as well, and have for many years. They come with no warning and last a few seconds or minutes. I can be carrying on a conversation, and suddenly I am outside my body. I get really shook up and try to carry on, but sometimes it is obvious to others that I am not. I don’t want to say anything because I think it may make it worse.
    Fresh air helps, rescue remedy does, and a small dose of diazepam helps after the fact. Getting away from bright lights, or fluorescent lights as they can trigger the feelings. Today I was at a hospital visiting, and I had the sudden out of body and aura flashing at the outside of my eyes. Currently I am having a mild migraine, getting worse. I find if I am in a store or around a lot of people, I am getting them more frequently as of late, and have also been under a tremendous amount of stress. Few days back there may have been a precursor, I was writing a check at the grocers,and I felt so out of body, the clerk chatting at me and I could not process. I wrote my check but it was difficult, I thought I may black out. I excused my self and asked to leave my groceries and I got outside. Clerk brought my groceries and asked if I was ok, by then I was, just shook up. My sinuses feel pressure as well. It is a horrid feeling. I am avoiding any place where I am to overwhelmed, like crowds, or stores with bright lights.. I cannot think of any foods as triggers, however I have wheat free, for about a year and had a whole wheat sandwich. Now thinking this may have been a trigger. Just adding my symptoms, it seems that many of you may actually understand what I am trying to convey. Best wishes to you all, and it is good to hear I am not alone.

    Reply

  18. Jill
    23 August 2014 @ 8:03 pm

    I sometimes have strange, disconnected feelings or other-reality symptoms with my migraines, but I’d never really thought of them as OBE’s, although from some of the descriptions, maybe that’s what they are. Anyone ever have an Alice in Wonderland Syndrome (AiWS) migraine episode? That’s pretty freaky. A few weeks ago I was laying on the couch with my eyes closed trying to get my migraine under control when I began to just feel strange. For a moment, I felt like my mental awareness was above my body (OBE?). Then, still with my eyes clothes, it seemed my arm began to grow longer and longer until it was long enough to reach down the hall into my son’s room. I really have no idea how long this lasted as I was feeling rather ‘floaty’ the whole time, my eyes were closed, and I had really had no sense of time. Could have been 5 minutes, 15 minutes or a half hour..I just don’t know. I do know that when it was over I felt kind of giddy and I remember that I didn’t really experience any pain during the episode. Very weird. By the way, I was diagnosed with migraines when I was around 16 and I am now 43.

    Reply

  19. Rene
    22 October 2014 @ 9:19 am

    I googled ” OBE’s and headaches” and found this site. I was diagnosed with migraine with aura in 2008. I recently had a very intense OBE where I could see myself below and I was tethered by a silver cord from my ankle to my body. I went “somewhere” where I saw some past loved ones, no not heaven but some transitional place. It was a great experience and I’ve been meditating regularly to try and bring that on again. I can’t seem to get where ever I was before but do feel outside my body and always get a bad headache afterwards. I guess my point is maybe an OBE is not a symptom of a migraine but the migraine comes along with an OBE.

    Reply

  20. Patrice
    9 May 2015 @ 11:00 am

    I was diagnosed with migraines with aura when I was around 19. I have had migraines since I was 10 years old, I am now 31. About an hour ago I was rocking back an forth on the floor because the pain was/is so debilitating!!! Next thing I know, I am standing up looking down at my body on the floor. I watch my mom come towards me, take the towel off my forehead and put cold water onto it an then places it back on my forehead. I watch my mom walk back to her room an she looks so sad. I walk back to my body an there’s this wispy white cloud circling around and around my body.I have had a migraine going on two weeks straight!!!!! I am so tired, drained, an week.
    🙁 …….

    Reply

  21. 5 Pleas For You to Stop Calling Your Bad Headaches Migraines – Josh's Thoughtless Thoughts
    20 January 2016 @ 8:24 am

    […] this is perhaps the most underreported symptom of migraines, they are certainly common to those of us who are plagued by the ailment. Difficult to […]

    Reply

  22. Victoria
    4 March 2017 @ 6:26 pm

    I’ve experienced almost daily migraine for the past five years. My neurologist recently told me I have ‘complex aura’ and what I described were OBEs which is how I came across this site. I often feel as if I am being pushed out of my body. I am still part there in my mind but my body has been possessed/taken over by something else. I can experience this up to three times a week and I would say comes on very intensely and lasts about 30 minutes. I also have some strange visual effects, can be at the same time but also not. These are more short lived, just a few seconds or so, things can be upside down, colours and the shade of colours are different, single items can appear to be in multiple places around the room, I can be surrounded with circles floating around me. I didn’t even think I experienced ‘aura’ as I have never had the flashing lights that many people talk of. It appears an aura can be so much more.

    Reply

  23. Laura
    10 December 2017 @ 9:49 am

    I thought I was crazy. The first time this OBE happened was when I was teaching middle school. I had a gang-ridden group of students outside of Philadelphia, and just chalked it up to stress at first. I have had migraines since I was 21. I am 49 now and and am currently experiencing hemiplegic migraines. This type of migraine is horrific. The symptoms mimic a stroke. When I have them, my body becomes virtually paralyzed on one side. I still have OBE and now am wondering if I have been hallucinating as well. I keep thinking I have seeing things and hearing things. I am on no narcotics or benzodiazepines. I am on nothing of that sort – NOT that there is anything wrong with that if anyone is on those things. I am, however on a host of other medications. This has taken a toll on my marriage, job, etc. I am substituting at the moment as I never know from day to day whether I will be able to work – actually whether I will be able to walk, talk and function. With the hemiplegic migraines, sometimes I can’t walk, hold things, remember things, my voice is garbled – sometimes for hours. The OBE have become more frequent. i told my neurologist about my OBE expecting him to think I was crazy and he told me it was a symptom of a migraine, so when I get them I know what they are now but they still scare me because I know my body is signaling me that something is going to go wrong.

    Reply

  24. Joseph
    12 December 2017 @ 8:14 pm

    Laura, I want to respond to you immediately. I have also had these migraines. I totally understand and get it. Mine that are the same are yours occurred when I was a teenager. Very frightening. Especially at the time because so little was known about migraines. They put me through barbaric stuff to try to diagnose it as as brain tumor. It wasn’t, of course. The migraines have changed over the years. I am now 74. They actually calmed down. But then about 5 years ago I got a version of it that I call “Mistaken Memory Syndrome.” I made up that name. It is as if I am living on two planes dealing with information from two lives both of which feel extremely familiar, but I am always unable to piece it together. And then afterwards I am left with impaired memory that I have to painstakingly put back together, practicing remembering and gathering facts. It´s scary. The last one of these that I had I was walking the Camino De Santiago a month ago and I experienced such weird stuff and I was out on the trail by myself. If I tell anyone what I experienced they will think I have lost my mind or am making it up.
    The comforting thing I can tell you is that it changes with age and I think it eases off a bit. You are not crazy. You have to put up with a near debilitating syndrome that will calm down. I would like to give you a big hug. And give you courage. So few people understand this. How good that you have a neurologist who acknowledges what it is. Mine have usually stared at me as if they are seeing a phantom. Or worse. Keep me posted on how you are doing.
    Joseph

    Reply

  25. Laura
    21 December 2017 @ 8:56 am

    I have hemiplegic migraines. They mimic a stroke. I become paralyzed on one side of my body for up to 45 minutes. I have had about 30 episodes in the last 3 years.

    Prior to the hemiplegic migraines, I had normal migraines for approximately 28 years now. They were horrific.

    The first time I had an OBE I was following my students out of my classroom. Whenever I have them, I feel like I am floating about six or seven feet above myself looking down on my head. I can only see the top of my head and who I’m following / what is in front of me. It’s like everything is normal, but there is a second “me” floating above myself.

    This experience lasts for about five seconds and I know I’m in trouble as it is a symptom. I have so many other auras as well with my migraines, but when this happens – watch out! It is coming on soon.

    Reply

  26. Laura
    21 December 2017 @ 9:17 am

    Oh my goodness. I hadn’t read all of the entries and just realized I had written before. Isn’t that sad. You would think I would have remembered. Now you know a little more about my situation. Thank you Joseph for your message. I sure hope it helps with age. My memory is getting so much worse now. I am still wondering if I am hallucinating at times. I found another neurologist that I will be going to in January. Right there on his website, he mentioned treating hemiplegic migraines!!!! I actually cried when I saw it. A friend of mine goes to him and, God love her, mentioned my condition to him. I looked him up and looked at his website.

    Thank God there are some people who believe me. I had an episode yesterday and one very early this morning. I have been having them in clusters. I started wearing a medical ID bracelet so people don’t think I am drunk or something if I would fall on the street. My speech becomes garbled. You understand – can’t walk, etc.

    At the very beginning of all of this, my doctors put me through rounds of testing but nothing like you went through. I am so sorry you had to deal with that. How awful.

    Again, thank you for your message. You have given me some hope. That is a great Christmas present.????

    Reply

  27. Andrea
    3 June 2018 @ 7:26 am

    I’ve had a slight but persistent migraine for several days now. Last night it started to get worse. All I wanted to do was go to bed, even though it was earlier than my normal bedtime. As soon as I laid my head on my pillow and felt comfortable, I was sucked out of the top of my head. I was conscious of it while it was happening. As soon as I completely left my body, I could see “myself” flying and I thought to myself, Woo hoo! I can fly! And off I went. Not sure when I returned, but the rest of the night, I had very bizarre dreams. I always have bizarre dreams, but these really seemed like I was in a different existence. Hard to describe. Anyway, I don’t mind having an OBE, as long as I make it back!????

    Reply

  28. Joseph
    5 June 2018 @ 10:46 am

    Laura, somehow I didn’t see you message earlier. Glad you have found a doctor and am wondering how it is with him? Is it good for you? Can you give us his name? Look forward to hearing from you.

    Reply

  29. Lita
    9 December 2018 @ 10:52 am

    I wasn’t diagnosed with migraines until my twenties but at that time was told I had been having them since childhood. According to the pain management specialist children experiencing abdominal pain and exhaustion afterward with no fever are most likely experiencing migraine symptoms. I would walk home from elementary school (after school since Nurse and teachers didn’t believe I was sick) and just pass out at my bedside without knowing if I was going to make it onto the bed and not even care and OBEs in this state were common and I would leave the neighborhood (recognizable, from above tree tops not at ground level) and suddenly be in a mountainous tree covered area. I guess it was my favorite place but no geographic or other landmarks to identify the site. Later in life I could be walking in a craft store and suddenly “move forward” and look over my shoulder and there I was, I knew a terrible migraine would insure within minutes or hours and I always attributed the chemical smells to the triggering of the migraine. Imitrex (spelling?) was the prescribed medicine (shot form) and it always felt like a short grass fire issued from the back of my skull toward the front and was terrifying the first time I received one so the poor nurse suffered a shirt grabbing verbal admonishment I did not know I was capable of delivering. Later in life I had a total hysterectomy and then weened myself off hormones that only seemed to worsen my symptoms and adding common herbs to all meats consumed helped make occurrences lessen to a fewer amount (3 -5) a year and now they are more of the vertigo type with aura lights days before and little or no pain. Still the exhaustion and “zoning out” episodes though, no memory of OBEs at those times anymore.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *