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Migraine - Success story of someone who suffered on a regular : Women-care

Migraine overview



A migraine is a headache that can purpose intense throbbing suffering or a pulsing sensation, typically on one facet of the head. It's often accompanied with the aid of nausea, vomiting, and excessive sensitivity to mild and sound. Migraine assaults can closing for hours to days, and the discomfort can be so excessive that it interferes with your each day activities. For some people, a warning symptom viewed as an air of secrecy takes location until now than or with the headache. An air of secrecy can consist of visible disturbances, such as flashes of mild or blind spots, or different disturbances, such as tingling on one thing of the face or in an arm or leg and concern speaking.



My experience-Success story of someone who suffered on a regular



Not that long ago I had a job interview at a company specialized in web development and they were wondering what I had been doing in those two years after graduating after they dug into my profile.

I opened up to them and explained my situation on how I decided in consultation with my parents that it would be a wise choice to take a sabbatical and spend my time on getting help from the doctors (with a small job as a technical support employee on the side to re-integrate.) Which in this case was even before my initial migraine diagnose.

They respected my choice and they were very empathetic. I had been told that one of their employees also suffers from this disease and even one of the spokesperson's wives.

Soon after I received a call and I was met with the positive message that I had been hired! My colleagues are super gentle and the workspace looks super spatious and modern.

It's almost as if this was destined to happen! I have been super afraid of getting back to work after all those months. Not that I forgot about all of my previously learned programming knowledge, but I just hadn't touched the subject for a while. However, I had made a hobby project a little while ago with the matching frameworks which they also happen to be using!

To be real with you, I am not instantly being a regular employee, but I am rather being trained and I get payed for it a little bit less than you're supposed to earn, which is completely understandable to me. (after a year they will negotiate my salary again, soon after the training term.)

Now, what's interesting is that I was already having less migraines per months. Both my magnesium supplement and Candesarthan work great, taking a walk for a minimum of 30 minutes per day, getting enough sleep, drinking enough water and there might even be more measures that I can't recall correctly?

All with all I was heading into the right direction and I was super confident to take on this new challenge at my new job! But, do you remember how I was talking about the call from the company in question? Well... exactly on that day I broke both my jaws and I was hospitalized at the exact moment that they called me.

Luckily for me, I was feeling good enough to start at my new job after three weeks of recovery. When I first started I wasn't really bothered by anything other than my sleep deprivation, but I had completely forgotten about my migraines because they just simply didn't appear anymore after all of those weeks?

This gave me the idea to ask a question on this subreddit to maybe get some more clarity and one of the fellow users made a really good point. Notice how I have been unable to clench nor grind my teeth? Appearantly this habbit can trigger migraines!

The reason why this shed a light is because I used to do this often when I was being (hyper)focussed. This week officially marks the fifth week after my last migraine attack and I would be so freaking happy if it persists like this!

So weird: you get a jaw fracture, but you indirectly and completely by accident, get to discover your biggest migraine trigger of all time! To be realistic and to make sure that this is the case, I would have to give it a little longer to come to a conclusion, but I am slowly but surely getting more convinced as the days are passing by.

submitted by /u/DarkEyeLOL
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Migraine Symptoms



Migraines, which have an effect on children and teens as nicely as adults, can development via 4 stages: prodrome, aura, attack and post-drome. Not everyone who has migraines goes through all stages.

★★★ /u/DarkEyeLOL
😄 " I hope each new day brings you closer to a full and speedy recovery! "

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