Don’t Let a Headache or Migraine Stop You!


The thumping in your head just won’t go away. Neither will the fact that you have five high Cs coming up! What can you do?

Let’s face it: Headaches and singing go hand-in-hand. USA Today estimates that each year 50 million Americans experience some form of severe headache for which they will seek medical attention. Of those, 5 percent are men and 95 percent are women.

Headaches are one of the most common causes of workplace absenteeism, and it’s easy to understand why. Concentrating on your work is tough when your head is throbbing.

Several types of headaches afflict sufferers. One of the most debilitating is the migraine, which affects almost half of all headache sufferers, mostly women. Unlike a “regular” headache, a migraine is a throbbing ache on one side of the head, often accompanied by nausea, vomiting and visual disturbances. Tension headaches cause a steady ache in the back of the head and along both sides of the neck. Cluster headaches are recurring headaches that cause severe pain in one eye. These headaches occur almost exclusively in men who smoke or drink heavily.

A number of factors trigger headaches. In fact, there are 129 known causes for them. Stress, poor posture (try a raked stage?), food additives such as MSG (monosodium glutamate), and indulging in chocolate and wine can cause headaches. Even relationships can cause headaches and migraines. “He/she gives me a headache,” isn’t just a figure of speech. The weather can also be a factor. Specific weather conditions, such as cold, dry air, generate just over half of all migraine headaches. Finally, even the cool-white, florescent lighting of a rehearsal hall can give you a headache.

When it comes to headaches, most people are looking for a quick fix. But singers have a special problem: Aspirin can cause vocal cord hemorrhage. Still, some singers gamble, pop pills and hope for the best. A female singer taking aspirin during her period is asking for double trouble.

Some pills may take a long time to work, some may make you drowsy—and they definitely should make any singer nervous! Unfortunately, when headache remedies don’t work after the first dose, many people try another dose. But you can’t pop medicines in your mouth like candy.

You can overdose on OTC medications. Just because you can walk into any pharmacy or grocery store and buy them doesn’t mean they’re safe. Taking more than the recommended dosage can be dangerous. Excessive amounts of these drugs can hurt the intestinal tract, kidney, and liver. In fact, 106,000 Americans die each year from the side effects of legitimate drugs prescribed by their doctors.

Additionally, OTC medications for migraines can cause headaches, when used in excess. These “rebound” headaches can occur if you grow dependent on painkillers. When the last dose wears off, your body cries out for more by giving you another headache.

Many types of treatments for migraines and the other types of headaches are available. This article will help singers fight the common headache and discuss what can be done to relieve it, drug-free.

The answer is shiatsu, an old Japanese finger pressure technique. Shiatsu is a much safer and more effective treatment than any medication you can find on a store shelf—and you don’t even have to leave your desk. It takes just 90 seconds, and it will get you back to functioning at your peak immediately.

The Benefits of Shiatsu

Shiatsu is a 5,000-year-old Japanese healing technique that involves the application of pressure to certain points on your body. Blockages in your internal flow are reflected externally as discomfort, soreness, stress, insomnia, fatigue and many other symptoms, including headaches. You can perform shiatsu massage on yourself by applying a hard, steady pressure to the point on which you are pressing.

Regular shiatsu massage therapy helps relaxation, improves circulation and strengthens the immune system. Shiatsu works very well on headaches, quickly and without side effects. Besides the headache treatment you will be learning below, shiatsu offers treatments that stop migraines in five minutes, as well as treatments for sinus colds, stiff necks and sore shoulders.

The Basics

These instructions are written for doing the treatment on yourself. The instructions for doing it on someone else vary slightly.

Sit in your chair with your and feet flat on the floor. Apply a hard, direct and consistent pressure at each point for three seconds. If you feel pain, stop pressing that point immediately and move on to the next point. During your next sequence, you may be able to tolerate more pressure at that same pain spot by pressing softer at first and then gradually pressing harder. In many cases, the pain will have disappeared.

If the headache persists after following these treatments, consult your physician.

The Treatment

Do each step in the listed sequence:

1. Imagine you parted your hair in the middle. This is the line you will follow. Start pressing at the middle of the forehead where the hairline begins. Apply a hard pressure with your thumbs. Continue moving your thumbs back (at one-inch intervals), following the part and applying a hard pressure. Each point is an inch apart Press your thumbs towards each other. Your final point will be the hollow at the base of the skull, where the neck and spine meet: the medulla oblongata.

2. At the crown or highest point of your head, put your thumbs next to each other and apply pressure. Follow an imaginary line down from the crown to the temples, which are right in front of your ears. Finish by pressing at your temples for three seconds.

3. With your thumbs, find the back middle of the earlobe on both sides of your head and move in about one and a half to two inches toward the back center of your head, where the medulla oblongata is located. Press toward the front of your body for three seconds. Move both thumbs halfway in towards the medulla and press your thumbs on both sides toward the front of your body. Now press one thumb in the medulla.

4. Drop straight down a half-inch from the medulla and place a thumb on each side of the spinal column. Pressing toward the front of the body, drop down an inch each time until you come to where the base of the neck and shoulders meet.

Three times should be enough to get rid of your headache. If not, do it once more. If your thumb gets tired from applying the hard pressure, place your middle finger on top of your index finger and press with both fingers. This will simulate the same level of pressure as you receive from using just your thumb.

Occasional headaches are unavoidable for most people—but you don’t need to call your understudy and lose your performance fee, or give up on practicing. In the time it would take you to find some pain relievers and a drink of water, you could be done with your shiatsu treatment and back to work. So the next time a headache strikes, don’t rummage in your desk for some aspirin. Skip the pills and enjoy the relaxation and pain relief of shiatsu.

Jerry Teplitz, JD, PH.D.

Author of Managing Your Stress: How To Relax and Enjoy, Switched-On Living, and Brain Gym for Business, Jerry V. Teplitz, JD, Ph.D., specializes in showing people how they can become more positive, energized, focused and effective. To receive detailed demonstrations of these and other headache relief techniques on DVD,VHS, or via online streaming, visit www.instantheadacherelief.com or call 1-800-77-RELAX.