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what does a migraine feel like

A migraine usually feels like a severe, throbbing headache that can take over your whole day, often with nausea and sensitivity to light and sound.

The core feeling

Most people describe a migraine as:

  • Throbbing or pulsing pain , often on one side of the head, sometimes both.
  • Pain that is moderate to very severe , making it hard or impossible to work, study, or function normally.
  • Pain that gets worse with movement (walking, climbing stairs, bending down), so you feel like you have to lie still.

Some compare it to:

  • “An ice pick in my head.”
  • “A helmet that’s several sizes too small.”
  • “My head is one rubber band away from exploding like a watermelon.”

These dramatic images actually line up with how intense and pressurized the pain can feel.

Other common symptoms

A migraine is more than “just a bad headache.” It’s a whole-body neurological attack.

Very common add‑on symptoms include:

  • Nausea and/or vomiting.
  • Sensitivity to light (photophobia) and sound (phonophobia) ; normal light or noise can feel unbearable.
  • Sensitivity to smells , like perfume or cooking, which can suddenly feel overwhelming or sickening.
  • Neck pain or stiffness and pressure around the eyes, temples, jaw, or back of the head.
  • Feeling dizzy, weak, or “foggy” , like your brain is wrapped in cotton.
  • Needing to lie in a dark, quiet room until it passes.

People on forums often describe feeling like their brain is “trying to escape their skull,” or like every sound and ray of light is being turned up to maximum.

The phases: before, during, after

Many migraine attacks unfold in stages rather than starting suddenly.

1. Before the headache (prodrome)

Hours or even a day or two before the pain, you might notice:

  • Unusual tiredness , heavy yawning.
  • Food cravings , especially for sweets or specific foods.
  • Feeling thirsty or needing to pee more often.
  • Mood changes (irritable, low, or strangely wired).
  • Neck stiffness or vague head pressure.

It can feel like “something is coming,” even if the pain hasn’t started yet.

2. Aura (for some people)

Not everyone has aura, but for those who do, it can feel scary and strange.

Aura can include:

  • Visual changes : zigzag lines, flashing lights, blind spots, or distorted vision.
  • Tingling or numbness in the face or arm.
  • Trouble speaking —words won’t come out right, or you can’t find them.

These symptoms usually build over minutes and last up to an hour, then the headache phase hits.

3. The headache phase

This is the part most people mean when they say “migraine”:

  • Intense, throbbing/pulsing head pain lasting 4–72 hours if untreated.
  • Pain often on one side , around an eye or temple, but it can switch sides between attacks.
  • Movement, light, sound, and smells all make it worse.
  • Many feel nauseated and may vomit or feel motion-sick by even small movements.

People in forums describe needing to crawl to the bathroom, lying on the floor because the cold feels like the only relief, or crying because every heartbeat feels like a hammer in their skull.

4. Afterward (postdrome or “migraine hangover”)

When the main pain fades, you can still feel:

  • Exhausted , like you ran a marathon or have the flu.
  • Mentally slow or “spaced out,” with trouble focusing or finding words.
  • Slight head tenderness or a dull ache if you move too fast.

This phase can last a day or so, even after the worst is over.

How it differs from a “normal” headache

Compared with tension headaches or simple dehydration headaches, a migraine is usually:

  • More intense and throbbing rather than dull.
  • More likely to be one‑sided and worsened by movement.
  • Accompanied by nausea and sensory sensitivity (light, sound, smell).
  • Sometimes preceded by warning signs (prodrome, aura) and followed by a hangover phase.

Here is a simple overview:

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Feature Migraine Typical tension headache
Pain type Throbbing/pulsing, moderate to severeDull, pressing, mild to moderate
Location Often one side, around eye/templeBoth sides, band-like around head
Worse with movement? Yes, activity aggravates itUsually no
Nausea/vomiting CommonUncommon
Light/sound sensitivity Very commonUsually mild or absent
Aura Present in some peopleNot typical
Duration untreated 4–72 hours30 minutes to several hours

When to worry and see a doctor

If you think you might be having migraines, it’s important to talk to a healthcare professional, especially if:

  • Your headaches are severe, recurrent, or disabling.
  • Pain comes with confusion, weakness, trouble speaking, or vision loss you’ve never had before.
  • You suddenly get “the worst headache of your life” out of nowhere.

These can be signs of something more serious that needs urgent care.

Quick recap (TL;DR)

  • A migraine feels like an intense, throbbing, often one‑sided head pain that can last hours to days and makes normal activity very hard.
  • It often comes with nausea, sensitivity to light, sound, and smells, neck pain, and brain fog.
  • Many people notice warning signs before, and a drained, hungover feeling afterwards.

If you’re having headaches that sound like this, keeping a symptom diary and seeing a doctor or neurologist is the best next step.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.