WikiRando

Caffeine Withdrawal Physical Pain

3 posts in this topic

Posted (edited)

Hi guys. On my journey I have eliminated from my life incredibly addictive things such as alcohol, cigarettes, red meat and other chemicals. Mostly by developing myself but also by using Leo's method of cultivating intense awareness which has been pivotal in understanding the patterns and breaking addictions.

The one challenge I noticed had recently that I didn't always have is Caffeine addiction and withdrawal. This manifests as a very painful headache when you miss your daily tea (I don't drink coffee). This is a bit of dual problem because the tea beceause usually the tea beverage I buy contains sugar too.

I noticed even with quitting supposedly addictive things like tobacco and alcohol, the physical withdrawal is not as strong as caffeine. I don't end up in actual physical pain.

But with the caffeine withdrawal headache, I actually end up in quite a debilitated state of headaches and physical pain which makes me have to drink some caffeine to relieve the pain.

I would just pop a painkiller but I'm legit wondering if I'm gonna hurt myself since pain is the body's signal and it might be telling you not to push it. 

Wondering if anyone has any experience with caffeine withdrawal and quitting caffeine especially focused on:

 

1. Dealing with very strong, debilitating physical pain / headaches of withdrawal.

2. Quitting tools and modalities 

3. Health effect or danger of the headaches

Thanks! 

Edited by WikiRando

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You could reduce your caffeine intake gradually instead of going cold turkey. Eventually the headaches go away, but a softer transition may be better for you, since you describe them as debilitating.

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24 minutes ago, The Renaissance Man said:

You could reduce your caffeine intake gradually instead of going cold turkey. Eventually the headaches go away, but a softer transition may be better for you, since you describe them as debilitating.

 

That's true, if nothing else works, I will have to probably get way more methodical with managing the dose decreases. Thank you

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