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Digital Gravity & Migraine: The Link Between Posture, Screens, and Pain

Digital Gravity & Migraine: The Link Between Posture, Screens, and Pain

Published 3 months, 2 weeks ago
Description

You tilt your head for one quick scroll — and suddenly your neck, jaw, and temples feel heavier. It’s not just “bad posture.” It’s a full-body stress signal your brain can’t ignore.

In this episode of Migraine Heroes Podcast, host Diane Ducarme explores how screens reshape the way your body holds itself — and how those tiny shifts in posture can quietly fuel tension, dizziness, and migraine attacks.

Blending neuroscience with Eastern medicine, we break down why the modern digital world is pulling your body out of alignment and your brain into overload.

You’ll discover:

💡 How forward-head posture and screen angles overload the brain’s pain and balance centers

💡 Why chronic neck and jaw tension trap the nervous system in a “micro-stress loop”

💡 What TCM teaches about posture, Qi flow, and how stagnation leads to pain

💡 Practical ways to restore alignment — not through perfection, but through ease, breath, and gentle awareness

This isn’t about sitting perfectly. It’s about reclaiming the natural alignment that lets your energy — and your life — flow.

🎧 New episodes every Monday and Wednesday

🔗 Discover our work on migraineheroes.com

References:

  1. Digital Eye Strain – A Comprehensive Review (Sheppard & Wolffsohn, 2018/2022, Ophthalmology and Therapy): Broad review of digital eye strain (computer vision syndrome), including visual symptoms (dry eyes, headaches, blurred vision) and associated musculoskeletal issues like neck and back pain related to poor ergonomics and prolonged screen time. Read more here.
  2. Assessment of Stresses in the Cervical Spine Caused by Posture and Head Position — Surgical Technology International (2014): Hansraj K.K. quantified how forward-head posture dramatically increases cervical spine load—explaining why screen use, neck strain, and posture imbalance can worsen migraine, tension headaches, and nerve compression. Read more here.
  3. A Model of Neurovisceral Integration in Emotion Regulation — Journal of Affective Disorders (2000): Thayer J.F. & Lane R.D. reveal how vagal tone links posture, stress response, and autonomic balance—key mechanisms behind posture-related migraines and nervous-system dysregulation. Explore the abstract here.
  4. The Channels of Acupuncture (Maciocia, 2006): Giovanni Maciocia explores how the body’s channel pathways and secondary vessels influence circulation, stagnation, and pain patterns, offering insights that align with migraine pathways from a Traditional Chinese Medicine perspective. Read more
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