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7 Comments

  1. Erin
    15 August 2014 @ 7:00 pm

    As a chronic migraine sufferer there are times when I say migraine when what I really mean is delicate, or just want some pain free time to myself because chances are, it’s not going to last long. That said, I am blessed to be a stay at home mom, so while I have to manage regardless, sometimes saying no makes it simpler.

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  2. Aurora
    25 September 2014 @ 9:41 am

    It is wrong to use migraine headache as an excuse. I would rather be at work than having to endure days of pain. Although I am a serious introvert, I am sociable when pain-free. Many around me have said it was “just in my head”; but somehow they realised there must be something wrong with my head after years of not attending meetings, parties, and being unemployed. No one would want to be in the shoes of a real migraineur.

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  3. verna Taylor
    21 December 2015 @ 7:06 pm

    I am trying to find out does my brother really his migraine headache because he his been to the hospital about the migraine the docter test his head body but they never give him anything to treat these migraine headache so could he be faking that he has bad migraine headache I REALLY want to NO

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    • Can’t reveal my name
      19 November 2017 @ 7:37 pm

      Is your brother missing stuff he enjoys doing or is he doing it and getting out of work he doesn’t want to do. A person I know in my youth group has “migraines” to get out of shool but she can go bowling while she has a “migraine”.

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  4. Johnny West
    2 August 2016 @ 2:45 pm

    I get infrequent aura migraines. When the aura fades, the incredible pain begins, as if someone is trying to scoop my eyes out with a rusty spoon while someone else drives spikes into my skull while yet a third person is drilling my molars with a hand drill. And usually just on one side, which is common. And it switches side from episode to episode. Get an aura sometime while on the freeway, that’s pretty special. You have to pull over and wait until it’s gone and then drive home in pain.

    Anyone who is faking a migraine needs to feel what they really feel like and then ask themselves if it’s really fair to those of us who actually get them. I’d do anything to avoid a migraine. But I don’t avoid responsibilities like work, family, chores, whatever. I do them even if I’m still in pain because that’s what is called being an adult. Only if I’m in intense, debilitating pain do I get in bed and check out on whatever pain killer I can find. They’re not fun. I’ve heard of people who get them weekly and daily, that would make me want to end it all. So, faking them? If I ever heard of someone I know faking them, I’d want to… well, let’s just say it wouldn’t be pretty. All of my friends know when I have a migraine, leave me alone and don’t call to ask how I am, assume I’m in pain and don’t want to talk. Nothing worse than having someone hover when you don’t want to talk, see light, hear movement or anything else.

    BTW, I highly recommend sensory deprivation float tanks as a way of helping ease things and keeping them at bay.

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