Esheel31 wrote on Jul 5th, 2016 at 1:18pm:I once told someone "This must be what it feels like to be shot in the face".
They just looked at me.
A week later they saw me experience a kip 10 in all it's terrifying glory, complete with snot and sweat and tears,and babbling to God for deliverance/death.
They didn't question me anymore.

Great post.
I'm currently going through my first cluster period since I got together with my girlfriend, almost a year ago. It had been three years since my last bout, which is the longest period of remission I've ever had since my first attack.
When I felt the first shadows, the early twinges, I was in semi-denial. "Maybe it's not The Beast. Maybe it's just tiredness or too much time spent in front of the computer or something."
As they got worse and it became obvious that a new cluster period was starting, I tried to describe what I was about to go through to my girlfriend.
I think I passed on the traditional "worse than natural childbirth" and "each attack is an equivalent amount of pain as having a limb amputated without anaesthetic" lines, and showed her a few videos on YouTube to prepare her for what she could expect to witness if and when she saw me having an attack.
Even then, I think she still probably thought I was exaggerating about how much pain I would be going through.
The attacks grew in intensity and frequency over the course of the next month. When I had my first KIP8 in front of her, she was desperate to help, asking me questions every few seconds "Can I get you
this? Would it help if I do
this? What about
this?" Eventually I said "yes" to a cold wet teatowel, not because I thought it would help, but because I wanted her out of the room, not asking me questions. It was actually surprisingly soothing on my shoulders/neck area, and on the side of my head/face, and so this became her "job" during my attacks - fetching fresh cold ones, as they only stay cold for a minute before my body heats them up to "warm cloth" levels.
The first time she saw me having a KIP9 she was in tears. Even more than I was.
She caught the second half of a KIP10 a few days ago. I had already had two attacks in the prior 12 hours that I had used my daily allowance of Sumatriptan injections on, and so this attack was going to be experienced "naturally".
When she arrived at my house I was collapsed on the cold tiles of the kitchen floor in front of the fridge-freezer with both its doors wide open so that the cold air would flow over me, clutching a teatowel to the side of my head that had inside of it an A5-sized bag of ice that had now completely melted, shaking and convulsing from head to toe, body almost leaping off the tiles every few moments from stabs of pain coursing through me, crying like a baby in the lulls and swearing like a trooper in the peaks (the actual "wailing like a moose that has been fatally injured by being hit by a car" phase had just passed before she arrived, thankfully).
Once this attack had passed, she no longer thought I was exaggerating with my original description of the pain.
After a really bad few days of attacks, I've decided to revise my description...
"Imagine giving birth with no anaesthetic three or four times a day for more than a month with no days off. Now imagine you have to push those 120-or-so babies out through your eye socket, the babies are gripping onto grappling hooks connected to your upper teeth and optic nerve, you have extreme sunburn on your face, scalp and neck that is burning you up and making it so that you can barely even touch your own head and face, and this is all happening while you have a cork jammed up your nose, heavy weights tied to your hair, and the contrast turned so high up on your vision that the slightest bit of light feels like you're staring directly into the sun with a telescope."
I think that comes a bit closer to the reality of it.
Wow, I needed to get that out.