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    Get instant relief from Headache




    Tips 

    1. Close your eyes and rest. ...
    2. Massage your neck and temples. ...
    3. Warm up your neck Try putting a heating pad or a warm cloth around your neck and the base of your skull to ease tension headaches. 
    4. Relax.
    5. Minimize stress.
    6. Watch what you eat and drink.
    7. Ice your forehead
    8. Take a hot shower
    9. Get a massage

    Try acupressure

    Forehead Region:

    All the points on the face and forehead are yang pints that are full of energy that generate from the head and face and flow downwards.
    Third Eye Point– This point is located just between the two eyebrows where the bridge of the nose meets the forehead. Applying pressure on this region helps in improving concentration, reliving eye strain, headaches,  and ulcer pains. Apply pressure for 1 minute and then move to the next point.
    Third Eye Point Acupressure

    Bright Light– This point is situated in the inner corner of the eyes just below the eyebrows. Applying pressure at these points works excellent in relieving sinus headaches and allergy symptoms. In addition, it also helps in improving vision. Apply pressure for 1 minute on both sides.
    innner corners of eye




    Temple Region:

    Applying pressure on these points helps in relieving temporal headaches on the sides of the head and migraines.

    temple region

    Face Region:

    Welcome Fragrance-This points are located both sides of the nostril. Applying pressure on these points helps in opening sinuses and reducing tension headaches.

    Nosebleed Point 3

    Hands:

    Union Valley– This point is located in the web between you thumb and index finger. Applying pressure on this point helps in relieving back pain, frontal headaches, tooth ache and releasing tension from neck and head.

    Chest pain point 1

    Stay hydrated

    Headache is one of the first signs of dehydration. To make sure you're drinking enough fluids, try to consume them throughout the day, rather than just guzzling them down at meal times or during periods of heavy physical activity, suggests Dr. Green. Institute of Medicine guidelines say that adults should consume between 11 and 15 cups of water a day, but that also counts liquid from other sources—like low-calorie liquids (tea and skim or low-fat milk, for example) as well as fruits and vegetables. Even moderate coffee consumption contributes to your daily fluid intake; a 2014 study published in PLoS One debunked the long-standing theory that its caffeine content contributed to dehydration.

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