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Preface

I became a healer by accident — at least, I didn’t plan it.

In 1970, I intuitively began developing a hands-on method of headache and migraine relief. By placing my hands on someone’s head, including my own, I could feel the headache (or palpate it, in medical terminology), work with its sensations, and stop it cold.

My clients swear I have magical hands, because I can relieve their headaches and migraines on the spot and halt the horrible symptoms that accompany their pain. I’ve relieved thousands of headaches with my protocol, but my work goes beyond that: I teach people how to heal themselves. I didn’t envision this path, but the process was so compelling that it became my passion and life’s work.

My Headache Story

My mom had severe migraines. As a child, I would massage away the knots and “spurs” from her shoulders and upper back. “Right there. Oh, that’s good,” she’d say. But mostly she would retreat to her darkened bedroom, cool washcloth on her forehead, and take a strong pain medication, which barely seemed to help. Until I developed migraines as an adult, I did not fully understand the severity of her pain.

My journey with headache healing began when I heard that you could relieve a headache by putting your hands on the front and back of the head. I gave it a try and, to my surprise, found I could stop a headache in its tracks. I started to experiment informally on people who had them, including myself, although during that time I didn’t get them often because I was living a more natural lifestyle.

More accurately, I was living in a whole new world. Four years into my college education at the University of California, Berkeley, I had dropped out to join 250 other idealists following hippie guru Stephen Gaskin. Together we traveled, in a caravan of school buses, to the rolling fields of rural Tennessee, where we founded an intentional spiritual community, a commune really, called The Farm.

We were like modern-day pioneers. Dedicated to building a better world by “walking our talk,” we bought 1,750 acres of land in the middle of nowhere and built a town, which grew to fifteen hundred residents. We raised, prepared, and preserved our food, eating a soy-based vegan diet with few sweets, no preservatives, and no alcohol. We had home births, assisted by midwives, and in the process we learned to trust the inherent wisdom of our bodies and the power of intention.

But even though we practiced meditation and followed Eastern as well as Western spiritual principles, collective living had its share of stressors. Thus, although my own headaches were rare back then, I got a lot of practice helping others with theirs.

In time, however, my situation changed. After leaving the community and returning to Los Angeles in 1985, I began getting frequent, debilitating migraines. Life was stressful. As a thirty-eight-year-old newly divorced mom of three kids who were experiencing big-city life for the first time, I was out on my own, struggling to support my family and starting a career in corporate America.

Several years later, I began waking up in the middle of the night, soaked in pools of perspiration, and I had hot flashes and mood swings during the day as well. I had no idea what was happening. Fortunately, my baby boomer generation often brought information into the public discourse that had previously been hidden and not discussed. This was especially true of issues involving women’s bodies and hormonal life cycles. And then I learned that migraines often increase during perimenopause in women who are prone to them. Thus I was able to figure out that my strange symptoms indicated I was beginning perimenopause. I was astonished — I was only forty-two years old!

Seeking solutions to handle all of it — my stress, the perimenopause, and the migraines — I read a multitude of books by physicians, researchers, and wellness experts. These included mind-body books by physicians Herbert Benson, Deepak Chopra, Andrew Weil, and Jon Kabat-Zinn; women’s health books by Christiane Northrup, MD, and Gail Sheehy; positive affirmation books by Shakti Gawain and Louise Hay; and headache books by Oliver Sacks, MD, and the physician-psychologist team of Roger K. Cady, MD, and Kathleen Farmer, PsyD. I attended lectures and monitored my body and habits.

Then I had a realization: in those months when I was eating regularly, drinking enough water, sleeping well, exercising, and remaining stress-aware, I did not get the blazing migraine that had become so predictable I could time my periods by it. I also noticed that my hot flashes were often preceded by angry or fearful thoughts. The connections between my mind, body, and health were becoming increasingly clear.

Life of a Headache Magnet

To my surprise, ever since I learned how to stop headaches on the spot in 1970, I seemed to become a magnet for people who had them. Wherever I went — work or job interview, party or family gathering, boutique or makeup counter — someone would inevitably complain to me, “Ugh, I’ve got such a headache! I have to [fill in the blank: take a break, go home, leave the party, lie down, take a pill . . .].”

So I would offer to help, saying, “I can stop your headache! All I’m going to do is put my hands on your head; just give me about five minutes.” (“Really? Okay. . .”) Lord knows why, but they trusted me. Slipping into the privacy of a nearby office, dressing room, the corner of a store or home, I would relieve the pain. Afterward, delighted and amazed, they would thank me and resume their activities, now pain-free. This occurred hundreds and hundreds of times without my understanding the process or knowing how pervasive the problem of headaches is.

Then in 1991, after twenty-one years of this informal experimentation, my path took an unexpected turn, and I made the decision to devote myself to a life in healing. I was working as a magazine advertising sales manager, finally at the top of my game and able to support my children, when I was suddenly laid off during our industry’s annual trade show. I was devastated. But then just an hour later, in the middle of saying my goodbyes, I stopped a client’s migraine — at her booth in the middle of the noisy Las Vegas Convention Center, packed with forty thousand people! I was surprised that my method worked even amid such chaos. A light bulb went off in my head, and I decided right then that I would teach others how to relieve their own pain.

The Scope of the Problem

In order to teach my healing method to others, I realized that not only would I need to become a keen observer of how it worked, but I would also need to learn all about headaches. I immersed myself in the literature, poring over consumer and medical books, peer-reviewed headache and neurology journals, countless articles, and research abstracts — until I began to understand the scope of the problem: there were millions of headache sufferers in the United States.

In 1992, there were an estimated 23.6 million migraineurs, of whom 11.3 million had moderate to severely debilitating migraines.1 This population was “bedridden for about 3 million days per month and had an estimated 74.2 million days per year of restricted activity due to migraine,” potentially costing businesses $1.4 billion in lost productivity annually.2

These staggering numbers are even higher today and, as in 1992, tell only half the story. Headache and migraine patients suffer for years, even decades, but not for lack of seeking a cure. Desperate for answers, most seek help over time from a variety of professionals, consulting with neurologists, pain specialists, psychiatrists, psychologists, dentists, orthodontists, optometrists, ENTs (ear, nose, and throat doctors), allergists, osteopaths, naturopaths, acupuncturists, chiropractors, homeopaths, nutritionists, yoga teachers, and mind-body practitioners, including biofeedback, physical, occupational, craniosacral, Reiki, and massage therapists.

And yet, after rounds of prescribed and over-the-counter medications and other therapies, millions of people still have millions of migraines. A particular drug might work at first but then lose its effectiveness. Patients who experience negative side effects from a medication or treatment discontinue it and switch to another therapy, thus beginning their search again. Prolonged reliance on one or a combination of medications results in increasingly frequent and intense episodes — and with their pain escalating, patients move on to another practitioner.

This miserable merry-go-round takes an emotional toll. Hope rises with the promise of each new, cutting-edge therapy, only to be dashed when it doesn’t work. After years of suffering, headache patients become increasingly isolated, disillusioned, frustrated, and angry. They begin to accept the previously unimaginable prognosis that their migraines are incurable. Worn down and resigned to their fates, with hopes of a cure gone, many patients respond by giving up, doing nothing, falling into despair, or becoming drug-dependent, which still leaves them with cycles of chronic headaches and pain.

Headache Healing Confluences

These insights into the desperate world of headache sufferers made me more determined to teach my therapy. I thought: “There’s all this suffering, and yet I can relieve a headache in minutes with my hands. I need to do what I can to bring my therapy out into the world.”

But first, I had to determine whether anyone could do it, or if it was just my touch. I transcribed into words what I had been experiencing on the head and in my hands and created simple step-by-step instructions to describe the process. I asked several people with history of migraine to test my instructions, and my willing test subjects reported being able to “stop a headache in its tracks” or “back one down from escalating into a full-blown migraine.” This was exciting!

In iterating the specifics of my method, I identified a fascinating cycle of sensations that occurred during the treatment. That is, all headaches had a predictable set of sensations that could be felt, altered, and released, and at each stage there were subtle, yet identifiable cues that, when complete, signaled relief. I used all these cues to codify my method into a protocol that included the focused concentration, or mental push, that seemed to shorten the treatment time.

Examining my method led me to a larger implication: not only did the headache resolve, but so did any associated migraine symptoms, such as nausea, disorientation, and sensitivity to light, sound, and odors. This signified an even bigger story: touch and concentration were producing neurological and physiological changes that were instantly affecting the brain, the pain, and the body’s systems.

I met with medical, mind-body, and research professionals — brilliant and generous leaders in their respective fields — to introduce my work and find a path forward. In 1992, I graduated from Massage School of Santa Monica as a certified massage therapist, trained in myofascial and energy work, and opened my practice in California. My first patients were referred to me by UCLA associate clinical professor and neurologist Susan L. Perlman. Based on Dr. Perlman’s follow-up comments — that her patients were able to successfully relieve but not prevent their headaches — I was inspired to design a program for prevention.

I attended medical research and scientific conferences and participated in early U.S. efforts to study complementary medicine. I went to the first National Institutes of Health (NIH) Office of Alternative Medicine Conference in Bethesda, Maryland, and to the NIH Clinical Research Training in San Francisco, California, in 1992. I attended four-day medical professional meetings, including “The Practicing Physician’s Approach to the Difficult Headache Patient,” sponsored by University of Chicago School of Medicine / Diamond Headache Clinic in 1992 and Annual Scientific Meetings of the American Headache Society in 1998, 1999, and 2001.

Attending my first medical conference was a fortunate coincidence. My dad, orthopedic surgeon Louis Spigelman, MD, had received an invitation to a headache conference and sent me instead. There, I was initially shocked to learn that most headache research was funded by the same pharmaceutical companies that develop and sell the drugs. They also sponsored significant portions of the conference — the doctors’ breakfasts, coffee breaks, luncheons, dinners, galas, and educational seminars. I also got an unsettling glimpse into the competitive world of headache medicine when a neurologist who presented a lecture connecting food sensitivities and migraine was roundly criticized by his colleagues.

If medical professionals were so hard on each other and if money controlled the field, what chance did I stand? Escaping the lecture hall for the Palm Springs sunshine, I met the one person I needed to meet: neurologist and cluster headache specialist Dr. Lee Kudrow, Sr. I demonstrated my method to him, and he invited me to his office, where he encouraged me to continue my work and to further develop its mental focus component.

Personal health challenges again inadvertently shaped my healing path when I had a life-changing experience in a cathartic breathing workshop. During an unexpected emotional release in which I experienced a rush of memories, grief, and cognizance, my fifteen-year-long mysterious and disabling upper-back injury instantaneously began to dissipate. This was followed by months of feeling my fascia creak open like newly oiled rusty hinges. The entire experience left me with the tangible sense that our cells are holographic: they store our pain, emotions, thoughts, and memories — which are all bound together and can be released simultaneously.

I noticed similar experiences in my clients during the first year of my massage and headache practice. As they released tightness and pain, their emotions emerged. It was increasingly clear that their bodies held stories, which were related to their headaches. I was drawn to train in somatic (or “body-as-self”) work to uncover and address the emotional roots of chronic pain and the unconscious, embodied patterns that hold it in place. Body-centered awareness helped my clients produce lasting change by connecting their headaches, habits, and underlying causes.

The Evolution of a Program

As a response to patients who still felt unheard or misunderstood after decades of chronic pain, stress, tension, fear, and frustration, I designed a mind-body, self-care program that addressed the limitations of conventional medical treatment. Instead of taking medications for relief and prevention, clients would practice somatic awareness, breathing, meditation, aligned posture, self-massage, and hands-on headache therapy — along with headache-healthy diet, guidelines, and a diary for tracking everything. I hired expert consultants from the UCLA Statistical Biomathematical Consulting Clinic to refine my client questionnaires, and I began collecting intake and outtake data on my program.

I received certifications in Body-Centered and Conscious Relationship Transformation from the Hendricks Institute, Master Somatic Coaching and Bodywork from Strozzi Institute, and biofeedback training from Stens Corporation. I trained in Somatics and Trauma with Staci Haines / generationFIVE, studied developmental psychology at UC Berkeley Extension, and wove in courses in energy work, intuitive development, somatics, meditation, shamanism, writing, and expressive arts.

I began teaching my first medical center programs at Kaiser Permanente in 1995 after moving to the Bay Area. Fortuitously, my interviewer had divulged that she had been dealing with “a two-year migraine,” so during the last five minutes of the interview, I stopped her pain. Thus, she subsequently facilitated my employment as a health educator at Kaiser Permanente, where I was also trained in course design.

I went on to teach my headache program to groups at medical centers, universities, corporations, community programs, and conferences, including Hill Physicians Medical Group, the UCSF Osher Center for Integrative Medicine, California Pacific Medical Center, the Institute for Health and Healing, UC Berkeley, Stanford University, Lockheed Martin, and Hewlett Packard. I gave workshops at the U.S. Association for Body-Psychotherapy Conference, the Association for Humanistic Psychology Conference, Integrative Medicine Forums at UCSF Medical School and UC Berkeley, and the International Somatics Congress.

Then nurse practitioner candidates at Holy Names College in Oakland, California, contacted me and asked if I had data for a research study. (Oh, did I have data! Finally, I’d get to use the client self-report information I’d been collecting!) Thus in 2000, the Mundo Program was brought to light in a retrospective pilot study that looked at seventy-eight migraine patients who had completed the program through their HMOs. The study found that the patients were able to reduce their number of migraines by 41 percent and their use of relief medications by 52 percent upon completing a four-, five-, or six-week class (depending on the institution).

The results were remarkable, but especially because this was a brief training period — and the patients had a median of nineteen headache years (meaning some had them for less time and others had them for more), which is a lot. Also, notably, 97 percent of the participants reported feeling better about, more educated about, and in greater control of their migraines, whether or not they were still having them. The findings were published in Cephalalgia, the peer-reviewed international medical journal of headache, and presented in poster session at the 2001 International Headache Congress in New York City.3

This was exciting! At last I had independent verification that my program worked. Looking forward to sharing it with more people, I then created the first iteration of my book proposal, which has finally come to fruition as The Headache Healer’s Handbook.

So welcome to my headache healer’s world, where you put your hands on your head and use them like biofeedback sensors to stop your pain! Working with pain as sensations and solving headache mysteries is fascinating — and I’m delighted to share my healing secrets with you.

The Headache Healer’s Handbook

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