Rain in the winter makes me unsettled, especially a LOT of rain with thunder but no lightning in what should be a frozen mid winter. Though there has to be lightning somewhere as the lightning actually creates the thunder. However yesterday and last night we had lots of rain, dense fog and some thunder but no lightening of the skies. In an ordinary climate rain in the winter would be normal but here we are trained to expect ice and snow, not a couple of days of warm rain. 
However it is water in the ground and that is a good thing. It is unusually warm and wet for January. But this will change in a few days of course. Hopefully before any buds appear on the trees. This has happened before too.
Victoria is here, which is good as yesterday I was suffering from one of my infrequent ice pick headaches. Some people call them the ice pick migraine. Otherwise known, by me before I knew what they were, as The Bad Head. I have always had headaches and this is a nastiest headache of them all. It happens maybe once or twice a year. It just keeps jabbing and jabbing for seconds at a time, every few minutes, sometimes four or five hits within a minute, at random intervals for a day and sometime two or three days and one cannot help but cringe every time the ice pick hits. There is no warning. The pain is so strong that sometimes it makes your knees go. It is very hard to keep ones face calm.
I only mention this as I only recently found out what this headache is, up until now I simply never mentioned them to anyone because I did not want to sound pathetic, but yesterday was particularly bad, the random ice pick jabbing at my head all day long. Cringing and ducking away from the pain before I can stop myself. By the end of the day I felt sick with it all. And if you get them as well, I am here to say you are not alone and there is nothing you can do but wait until bed time then lay your head down. A still head seems to cope with the Bad Head better. It is a primary headache, in that it is not a symptom of anything else. The pain is the whole thing.
And it is still knifing into me at irregular this morning.
I have read them described as harmless which makes me want to give the author of that sentence a fast jab to the head with my metaphorical pick axe.
Now that I know what this is called, and know that other people get them as well, I don’t feel so bad somehow. The pain is still untenable but it is not threatening to kill me now. It has a name and company. Isn’t that just human nature.
You know I do not want messages of sympathy – I am only telling you this in case one of you has the same headaches and you might like company! Or at least know that you are not alone. And yes I know misery likes company. Tomorrow will be better.
It may begin to lessen today. But resting does not help, it is just an endurance test. So, after we have finished all the chores Victoria and I are going to gather everything necessary to make this years soap.
I hope you have a lovely day,
Love celi




77 responses to “Ice Pick Head Ache”
Having the lightening a long way away can only be a good thing, since it’s not hitting anything nearby.
I do hope the ice pick leaves you soon – you must feel like Trotsky!
I am certainly having a Trotsky hair day!.. c
I think they are also called Cluster Headaches and usually treated in the same manner as Migraines. I am off to the kitchen to make your Coleslaw, hoping that I can detox the last of the Crud out of my body with a few large helpings, forgot the seeds and raisins, will add them tomorrow 🙂 Laura
That coleslaw is great for the body – I need to make some too! c
Cluster Headaches are different. They are proper headaches that arrive for hours at a time in clusters. I would not like to have that many headaches one after the other – that would be bad. The pick axe is little random knife like jabs for hours or days – they are too short to treat and arrive at full strength out of the blue. c
well sympathy or no sympathy..I am darned sorry that you have a pick axe head ache…L hope you will soon feel better
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2017 at 2:30 PM
I hope so too! c
Here’s to hoping the ice pick leaves soon. I have never had this, only sinus headaches, thank goodness, but one of my sons gets them about that many times a year and it’s just a misery. We are bracing for torrential downpours tonight, almost an inch of rain here on the coast. I don’t know how much more ice (literal ice) I can deal with! One of the paddocks has gates that are totally under about 4″ of thick ice, so it’s hopping fences for us. Yuck. Oh well, weather just is, and my poor planning on that gate is another lesson learned!
Oh I hate that when the ice jams up a gate – that happened at the beginning of this winter and it was not until I left for Canada that i could get that gate open and liberate those poor pigs. I need to watch sheilas gate now too – it has slipped into a big puddle and might freeze shut overnight. c
I get them when rain storms move in. The big ones, like the one that rolled through my neck of the woods last night. Makes it hard to sleep when the pain gives you grief. Then the meds you take to ease the pain have just enough caffeine to stop you from sleeping. Sigh. Slow and steady today, rest as you will. Hugs!
I too get some pretty interesting headaches when the barometric pressure changes….
Oh no! Even worse if you can’t sleep. The only thing that interferes with my sleep is an early plane.. c
Hum – kick back for the bug maybe? It is nice to know that while suffering you are not alone in what you are dealing with. Another blogger I follow has mental illness – it freed her to be open about it – and it freed many of us who suffer with mental illness too. Mine is seasonal depression. I guess I am lucky one with migraines however – menopause cured mine. One of the few things I can say about menopause I guess! Stiff Chin Hairs is one of the not so good things however. 😉
We should put that in the book! Menopause curing your migraines.. c
Leaving my husband cured mine *very big grin*
Mine, too!
Menopause cured my migraines as well. Feel better soon. xx
I hope your headache stops soon today. Strange weather. We are having freezing rain today also. I would rather have snow, ice can be so dangerous. I am happy to have the day off so we are staying inside making homemade hamburger buns for our homemade veggie burgers. Hopefully they turn out well!
Home made buns are the best! c
This is my first attempt at the buns. I hope they work out. I find it a little disturbing how long bought ones stay fresh on the counter without even growing mouldy.
If your tum starts doing an apocalyptic urp, chew on some candied ginger. I get migraines; I always have candied ginger in my pantry. As an aside, my migraines are always associated with extreme (changeable) weather. >
Candied ginger makes me vomit! True story! no reason why, just back up it comes. c
Okay, you’ll feel much better if take the ginger off your shopping list then. 😉
I am so fortunate to not have headaches. My wife has had them. With her retirement and the right mess, they are much less frequent and severe.
Peace…Jim
I am glad – maybe less stress and things. Whatever it is i am glad it works for her.. c
Oh the rain … here now … just starting. I have found in these last few winters that my biggest job is finding ways to keep our animals safe despite the ice storms. The snow I can plow … the ice? With the freeze ups that seem to come so quickly after a thaw sometimes the ice stays the rest of the winter. Always just a few centimetres beneath the snow. Hope your pick axe moves away today.
I hate ice when large animals are navigating themselves about it – especially my silly cows who think they have to RUN to me when they see me.. terrifying.. c
Celia, in my research I have come across an herb that one takes for migraines which from people I know who this has occurred with say it’s good. You just have to grow some, dry it, powder it in a coffee bean grinder, make it into capsules or make tea (it’s VERY bitter), and take it every day. Feverfew. You can grow it in your garden. It’s a natural NSAID kind of medicinal herb so you can’t take it if you’re on blood thinners. But it might help. It’s usually available on several bulk herb sites (try Mountain Rose Herb Company). Hope this helps.
Thank you for this information, Diane. Sounds like this needs to be taken very carefully. c
I take feverfew every day in a pill form (you can buy them from natural herb places) and it has completely cured my migraines. I still get the occasional headache, but nowhere near as severe. If you want to try it, you need to persevere for about a month before seeing any results. Different preparations can also make a difference – when the pharmacy I buy mine from ran out of the pills I normally take, I tried another brand which wasn’t so strong, and back my migraines came within about a week. Migraines are always horrible whenever you get them, but at least yours only come by once or twice a year – it is when you are getting them once a month or even more often that they become disabling! I never thought of connecting my migraines with changes in the weather – it makes me wonder now!
Thank fully these are not migraines – I do feel for migraine sufferers.. c
Yes, the cold weather moves in here tomorrow too. We’ll go from 58 F today down to 38 or so tomorrow. Also rainy here too, but we do need it!!! xo
We are at the 37 today, but 58! That is a lovely day! I bet you get piles done in the winter when it is not to cold. c
Oh My Gosh, a warm day in the winter is a dream! We are out all day long with the dogs, cleaning the barn, blazing trails through the woods, clearing rocks from the fields we are working on turning into pasture, turning the compost (all of this done by hand and back!) and loving the weather. It always reminds me that spring is on the way! 🙂 And, equally exciting is that the sun is staying in the sky for minutes longer every day!!! 🙂
I get them too. Maybe 2 or 3 a year that last 1 to 3 days, so I can sympathize completely. Nothing helps but to lie in a dark room with no noise. Make sure to drink lots of water.
They are so nasty aren’t they – hope you don’t get too many more.. c
Huh! I get these too! I never knew what they were called! Glad to have a name for them. And even though it means others are suffering, I’m also glad to know other people experience them because I thought I was the only one! Gosh they are horrible, and it’s the randomness of the jab that makes them so frustrating. You can’t prepare for the pain. And I never have figured out why I get them, or what the trigger is. Sometimes a drop in pressure, but not always. Sometimes if I have chocolate before bed, but not always (I’ve tested this theory a lot! 🙂 ). One of your readers suggested feverfew – I think I might try that.
You and me Elizabeth – ! c
The internet – a great place to calm down your worst nightmares about symptoms or a great place to ramp up your worst fears. I have about 70/30 ratio on calm to fear. 🙂
I hope the ice picks disappear soon, never to return.
Yes, the internet is not the best place to seek information – you only really get the top hits – and I don’t trust a lot of what I read. the 70/30 is about right in usefulness too. c