j0hnglist wrote on Apr 27th, 2009 at 2:51pm:I wanted to share something I noticed with myself. It seems when I freak out about my CH when it starts, it gets worse and worse. I noticed if I accept its happening, try to relax, breathe deeply, the attack isn't as severe (still very painful but not as bad). I think being mentally calm is a crucial aspect during an attack. On Friday, I was emotionally distraught from the whole thing, and my attack become so bad that it made me more anxious and it created a snowball affect. I've tried distracting myself during attacks too by playing the radio or soothing music at low volumes. Has anybody picked up any meditation techniques that are helping them during attacks? Would to hear what you guys think.
Hi,
Took me 10 or so years (out of 27 and counting) to figure out what you said above...good for ya! Some comments:
1)Every day, at lunch, I leave work for 1 hour and do a form of untrained meditation. Basically is just relaxing and clearing my thoughts of everything but calm. Slow, moderately deep breathing
helps get me there...I have no doubt it is important in reducing number and severity of hits.
2)Every once in a while, if I am in a particularly strong frame of mind and willing to put in the massive effort it requires, I have aborted a hit by the following: It would take too long to fully explain so the short version is...
This sounds counter to what Bob said, but in a weird sort of way it's not. I find the center of the pain, the ice pick point, the burn, while ignoring all the tentacles...I surround it with, well, a circle. Then slowly, mercilessly squeeze that circle smaller and smaller and smaller until the pain is just squeezed out.
Like I said, incredibly hard, and I hope doesn't piss people off because it sounds so "different". But then, I'm different, I'm a clusterhead and thinking outside the box is sometimes all I got.
3) Melatonin doesn't work for me at preventing nighttime hits (2-6 a night, every night). BUT, what it does is keep me sleepy when I do wake...and with the pre thought determination to remain CALM, not fully awake, hit the O2, abort, and go back to sleep...a very important weapon against the beast for me.
4) I'm with Beth. Crying only makes it worse, I concentrate on NOT crying...up to an 8 I can do it...after that it is almost impossible (for me) not to...
5) Slow, deep breathing while on O2 helps keep me calm and nearly as important to me as the O2 itself...
Best,
Jon