brightlotusmoon: (Default)
brightlotusmoon ([personal profile] brightlotusmoon) wrote2007-10-31 01:17 pm
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Halloween at the office (and in general)

Lawyers and staff members alike are walking around in costume or at least parts of costumes. Apparently, a bunch of people transformed one of the larger case rooms into a "Haunted Hallway" so people can be "delightfully terrified." The email that was sent around promoting it also came with a warning: "If you are prone to seizures, stay away. Seriously."
I don't like haunted anythings anyway, but the seizure warning was the clincher. Luckily the door will be closed unless people are entering or exiting. And it's only for a half hour, twice this afternoon. However, this is the most I've seen the office do for a holiday thing. Usually for Halloween there are costume competitions. And they really really get into Christmas.
Last night, Adam carved out two pumpkins: a cat arching behind a fence, and a mushroom cloud from a nuclear explosion. The man understands scary. It's the rituals themselves that really matter, he says. We don't do costumes anymore, but we do set out scarecrows and decorations, intricately carved jack o'lanterns, among some other particular things. Adam is his own very personal kind of eclectic pagan, and he tends to work with some of the oldest magical rituals known. He's taught me a few, particularly blood rituals. I'm waiting for my new amber pentacle pendant to arrive in the mail before I do any work like that. The full moon of Samhain has technically happened already, but the veil is still thin enough of course. I love the tinglies I get whenever it's really thin.
Migraine's still here, yes. Not surprised.

Migraine/ shoulders with fibro

[identity profile] suzthefrog.livejournal.com 2007-11-01 01:21 am (UTC)(link)
Hi!

I hope you don't find me too annoying or weird... but are you sure that it isn't your fibro-flaring shoulders causing the headache (and not the other way around)?

Ever since I developped fibro, it is how it has always been for me. It makes sense considering the energy path... Our "chi" basically comes from the lower part of our abdomen, goes down the pelvis, then upward along our back. Tensions and stiffness in the back (common in fibro, especially for those of us spending hours at the computer) jeopardize the "chi flow" up to our heads, causing symptoms such as neck pain, headaches, poor concentration, "weird" eye sight, etc.

One might argue that, even if this is true, knowing it does not help much... But I have a much better control over these headaches now that I know I actually have to "treat" my upper back/shoulders to ease them...

Re: Migraine/ shoulders with fibro

[identity profile] brightlotusmoon.livejournal.com 2007-11-01 01:35 am (UTC)(link)
*ponders*
That all makes a lot of sense. I do tend to get migraines following shoulder pain issues!