July 01, 2024
Photography by Manu Prats/Stocksy Untied
Migraine can make it tough to keep up with friends. Here’s how to cope with the strain that migraine can put on your friendships, plus how to communicate your needs.
Having a chronic illness like migraine impacts the way you navigate the world.
That means migraine also impacts the relationships you build with the people in your life, including romantic partners, family members, and friends.
Take friendship, for example. Migraine can make waves in your social life, complicating plans with friends and making it hard to keep up.
Each person’s experience of migraine can impact friendships in unique ways. Here are just a few of those ways, plus tips for easing those impacts and cultivating caring and understanding.
Attacks and painful symptoms may sometimes stop you from doing what you want or keep you from always being present in the ways you want.
Migraine may cause you to:
This can get in the way of maintaining strong bonds with friends and bring up feelings of guilt.
However, the friends who know you well likely understand when and why you need to take things slow.
Migraine doesn’t mean you can’t live your life, make amazing friends, and have fun.
Here are some tips for building and maintaining healthy friendships with people who love you just as you are.
Friends and community are a huge part of life, whether you have migraine or not. With migraine, your support network may play an even bigger role at times.
As much as possible, surround yourself with caring, fun, and empathetic people. Focus on people who make you feel safe and comfortable and who don’t judge you.
Cultivate friendships with people who are there for you when you need them, and let them know you’ll be there for them when you’re able.
These are the people who will care about you and make space for you exactly as you are!
Joining online or in-person support groups is a great way to add to your support network and connect with people who know what you’re going through. Bezzy Migraine forums are just one option for this type of connection.
You may find that some people just don’t get it. They may dismiss your experience with migraine or think you’re exaggerating your symptoms. In this case, check in with yourself about how you want to move forward with the friendship.
Whoever you include in your life is up to you. Remember that it’s OK to prioritize yourself if a friendship feels unhealthy.
Friends share what’s going on in their lives, and migraine is part of what goes on in your life.
You may not feel the need to share everything with everyone, and that’s totally OK. Still, it’s important to have people in your life who make you feel safe enough to open up.
In friendships where you feel comfortable doing so, share anything and everything you want. You can talk about how migraine impacts you, your journey with finding treatment, what migraine attacks feel like, your frustrations or successes with doctors, your triumphs and steps forward — and whatever else you want to share.
Open communication with friends can:
Migraine can be a heavy burden to carry.
For many, it can lead to mental health conditions like depression, anxiety, and bipolar disorder.
In fact, according to the American Migraine Foundation, people with migraine are about five times more likely to develop depression than people without migraine.
Being open with friends and loved ones can help you remember that you’re not alone, which may make it a bit easier to deal with both the physical and emotional burdens of migraine.
Plus, open communication can also help relieve tension and reduce stress, which can help prevent migraine.
Your best friend in the whole world may know you better than anybody, but they aren’t a mind reader. Until you tell your friends what they can do to help, they may not know quite what you need.
Share with your friends the ways that they can best support you, whether that means during an attack or in general.
For example:
Your friends likely want to help in whatever way they can. The sooner you communicate the type of support you need, the sooner they can provide it.
Migraine is unpredictable. You may wake up in terrible pain one morning even though you were feeling great the day before.
This can make it hard to be present when you want to be. It might also mean that sometimes you need to change plans both big and small, or even cancel them altogether. This can happen fairly frequently.
When migraine is forcing your hand, you may find yourself with no other choice. In this case, prioritizing your physical and mental health is crucial.
Remember that your friends likely know you have migraine, especially if you talk with them openly about it. They’ll understand that you need flexibility and compassion.
As for how to cancel, here’s one quick idea for the times when you’re struggling to find the words:
“I was really excited to see you, but I’m dealing with a migraine episode, and I’m feeling terrible. Let’s take a rain check. I’ll [text, email, call, message] when I’m doing better so we can reschedule!”
Missing something that you were looking forward to can be upsetting or frustrating. It’s OK to feel whatever emotions you’re feeling. It’s also important to show yourself love and acknowledge that what’s happening isn’t your fault.
Just as you can cancel plans when you need to, you can also say no from the get-go. You don’t have to be mid-migraine attack to set boundaries about what you can and can’t do.
If your friend proposes an activity that you know could trigger an attack, that sounds more stressful than fun, or that you just plain don’t want to do, you’re allowed to say no.
Even without migraine in the picture, there’s no obligation to say yes to everything. People have different tastes, and one person’s idea of fun can be another person’s hard pass.
Friends don’t have to do everything together. It won’t hurt your friendships to skip the outings that are bad for your health and well-being, whether physical or mental. Both you and your friends will likely be better off for it in the long run.
Some activities may be more difficult for you depending on your migraine triggers. Maybe events with loud noises and flashing lights, like big parties and concerts, aren’t really possible for you. That’s OK!
Just because some activities aren’t a good fit doesn’t mean you can’t find other ways to spend fun and quality time with friends. You and your friends can adapt to each other’s needs and make time for the things you can do together.
Here are just a few migraine-supportive activities you can try with friends:
If you’re feeling up for the party, concert, or whatever other big outing you and your friends have planned, go for it! Consider keeping your migraine rescue kit handy and having a plan to get home in case symptoms strike.
If your friend has migraine, here are some tips to keep in mind:
If you have migraine, it’s probably no surprise that it can impact your friendships. You also likely know that you still have really great friends!
For the moments when you’re having a hard time keeping up or feeling drained, strategies like talking openly with your friends, sharing with friends how they can help, confidently prioritizing your health, and finding migraine-supportive activities may help you reconnect with your friends — and with yourself.
Medically reviewed on July 01, 2024
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