Day 26

For the past couple of days I’ve had a distant headache. Not a sharp-behind-the-eyes-just-kill-me migraine, but it’s still annoying. I have a thesis to write, brain! Could you stop throbbing for a few minutes please!

I think my many hours spent at the computer, long commute, lack of sleep, and constant stress are negating much of the good that my careful diet is doing. I’m not sure what to do. I have to finish this thesis! I have to do my TA work! I have to drive 3 hours everyday! I’m not sure how to cut out these triggers.

I’ll be a totally different person come May, I know it. I just have to make it until then. Help.

Day 19

I’m coming off of a 2 day migraine right now. Headaches suck, but this one was shorter than the previous ones have been. And I think I know what caused this one: beef overdose.

Gabe and I don’t eat a ton of beef, maybe once every week or so. But a series of coincidences led to us having a burger on Friday night, a steak on Sunday, a steak on Monday, and leftover steak on Tuesday. I think that’s enough to give anyone a headache. So we’re taking a little hiatus from eating beef for now.

Tonight  I made this curry. I subbed shallots for the onions. I don’t know where to buy Tempeh, so I made it with chicken, and it was delicious.

Day 4

I’ve had a few mild, super-brief headaches in the past couple of days. I’m almost 100% positive they’ve been blood sugar related. I try to keep enough healthy snacks on hand so that it isn’t a problem, but long days at work + long commutes + no place near my office to grab something healthy = occasional low blood sugar and headaches.

The good news is, they’ve gone away as soon as I’ve had something to eat. When I got home this afternoon, I was starving and feeling a little headachy. I ate a couple of crackers and was fit to go on a bike ride with my husband 10 minutes later. Huzzah!

Breakfast: sunflower seed butter toast (turns out, sunflower seed butter is pretty good. I just had to stop thinking that it was a replacement for peanut butter, because then it was disappointing. But if I think about it as its own entity, then I like it.)

Snack: Celery sticks with sunflower seed butter and a touch of honey

Lunch: Leftover roast chicken, cheese (1 slice American) and triscuts, grapes

Snack: a couple of pre-bike ride, headache-ridding crackers

Dinner: ginger soba noodles (without the onions and with only a very small amount of rice vinegar), roasted asparagus, and sauteed shrimp, grapes

Dessert: We were craving something sweet so I made this blueberry cake. I’d planned to make it Sunday and only just got around to it last night. I made it using the last of the blueberries I picked (and then froze) from a friend’s blueberry bushes. We had the cake with a scoop of ice cream. Sooo good.

Day 3

I know that school contributes heavily to my migraines. I’m super stressed all the time, I’m in my car three hours every single weekday, and I don’t really enjoy the work I’m doing anymore. It’ll all be over in May (if that thesis gets written). And in the meantime, I have a wonderful husband who makes me dinner and rubs my feet when I’ve had a really long day.

Tonight he made breakfast for dinner. I’m not allowed to eat any processed meats like bacon and sausage because they often contain headache-inducing nitrates. So I made my own using ground beef and this recipe. I took several of the little patties out of the freezer this morning, so they were all thawed out by the time he started cooking. I walked in the door at 7:30 tonight to the smell of sausage and eggs frying on the stove. Not the healthiest dinner, perhaps, but heavenly to come home to!

After dinner I whirred some sunflower seeds in the food processor with a little canola oil. I’m having sunflower seed butter on toast for breakfast tomorrow, and I can’t wait to try a sunflower seed butter and jelly sandwich. I was too full after my breakfast dinner to really sample it, but I hope it’s good. It looks a little thin, but I’m hoping that is because the spinning metal blades of the food processor warmed it up while I was making it. Also, I may have added too much canola oil. We’ll see what it’s like after a night in the fridge.

Breakfast and midmorning snack: American cheese toast

Lunch: Leftover roast chicken, applesauce, grapes, spinach pinwheels

Dinner: Breakfast! Eggs, grits, grapes, and homemade beef sausage

Day 2

Yesterday we filled the fridge and the pantry with healthy, non-headache-inducing (hopefully) food. We also filled a trash bag with any potential MSG, nitrite, sulfite, and tyramine bombs (*sniff* farewell lunchmeat. goodbye cheese).

I roasted a chicken for dinner last night which we ate with spinach a yeast bread I baked a while back and had stored in the freezer (I can eat yeast-risen breads as long as they are more than 24 hours out of the oven). I’m going to be using the leftover chicken in my sandwiches this week.

I’m coming off of a three day migraine right now. I have just a little sharpness behind my eyes, but I think I’ll be able to be productive today. Gotta get that thesis written so that I can graduate and rid myself of my greatest stressor (and likely greatest headache inducer).

Breakfast: sprouted grain toast and applesauce

Lunch: roast chicken sandwhich, cottage cheese with blueberry jam

Snack: triscuts with American cheese (no tyramine)

Dinner: Ginger soba noodles with spinach and chicken Green salad with shrimp and migraine-friendly vinaigrette (we had to have something Gabe could make since I got home too late to cook)

Day 1

Today I am starting a new diet which will hopefully help me control my migraines. This blog exists only for me, to help me chronicle what works and what doesn’t, to keep a record of good days, bad days, recipes, and anything else that seems pertinent.

I spent 3 hours this morning making a list of foods I can and cannot eat, looking up recipes, and creating a grocery list for this week. I did not have time to do this. I should have been completing chapter 3 of my thesis (which has not actually been started yet). But as I’ve been battling a migraine for the past 2 days, this seems so much more important right now.

I’m taking the advice of Dr. Buchholz in his book Heal Your Headache: The 1, 2, 3 Program. I’m starting with this because I’d rather not start taking Triptans and other meds that cause a never ending cycle of migraine rebound. Dr. Buchholz’s main idea is that everyone has the migraine mechanism in their bodies and that migraines are caused by triggers—foods, weather, hormones, exercise, even sex. Every person has a migraine threshold and every person has different triggers that can cause them to exceed this threshold. Some people have very high thresholds or very few triggers. These people do not get headaches very often. Lucky them.

Other people, like me, either have a low threshold or are susceptible to many triggers (or both). The diet eliminates all of the most common food triggers to help you stay below the threshold, thus reducing or eliminating headaches. I really hope it works.

Many of the foods on the list are highly processed foods: anything with MSG (which apparently is anything that comes in a box or a bag in the grocery store aisles), snack foods, cheese, processed meats. But there are plenty of things that I would consider “good for you” that are also on the list like citrus, onions, beans, and nuts. Gabe (my husband) and I don’t eat a ton of junk (aside from those all-too-frequent Chick-fil-A runs because Chick-fil-A is freaking delicious), but I am really going to miss cheese, chocolate, bacon, peanut butter, lemon, lime, onions, bananas, and freshly baked yeast-risen breads.

Hopefully once I’ve established control over my headaches (this should take about 4 months) I can gradually add back some of these favorite trigger foods, especially lemon and onions, because, really, how do you even cook without lemon and onions?? The one thing Dr. Buchholz suggests never consuming again is caffeine. This isn’t too terrible since I don’t drink soda and I prefer decaf tea. The problem is, decaf tea and coffee have some caffeine in them. And I LOVE my decaf tea. So for now, I guess I’m going to stick with naturally non-caffeinated herbal teas and hope that I can safely add back my decaf tea in a few months.

Fingers crossed!