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Thanks, I guess?
I was trippin the light fantastic for half an hour.

Hope you are doing better!![]()
That was... a weird experience.
I didn't even know it was a thing until I had it this morning.
You live and learn, until you don't, I guess.
Oh no prob. It's apparently harmless, temporary, and in my case painless.
Mostly just trippy.
and way fucking better than an orgasmic migraine. i'm so happy i haven't had one of those in a couple years. there's not much worse than feeling that warm rush of pleasure suddenly turn into agonizing, skull crushing pain.
yeah, sounds like a few i've had though not had one for years and years. the crazy black and white zig-zagging i'd get that grew in size as it progressed one side to the other meant trying to do anything was impossible, so disruptive it would make me feel nauseous till i threw up or it finished. when they came with the headaches, i would throw up pretty fast.Right?!
I started getting them this past year. Family members have all suffered from migraines so I was familiar with the symptoms
At first I was like... what the fucks going on with my vision. Then I was like... am I having a stroke here? Then I was like... oh, this is a migraine. I readied myself for the worst headache of my life.
My right eye became increasingly blinded by the most fantastical lightingstorm ever imagined. Techno colored television static. Magical, but highly annoying. Laid down still anticipating my headache. Nothing. No headache.
The weird thing was that with my eyes closed, the lightingstorm seemed to had slid into my brain and I was "seeing" it from there. But when I opened my eyes it would slide forward back into my vision.
Fucking weird shit.
i didn't know it was called that. i've mostly had them accompanied by the extreme head pain and used to think it unbelievable that others claimed to have migraines but were walking around. when they come without the headache, it's still debilitating because you can't use your sight reliably, and closing your eyes makes no difference as it carries on behind your eyelids! don't think i've had the multi-coloured variety, though, mainly black and whiteThat was... a weird experience.
I didn't even know it was a thing until I had it this morning.
You live and learn, until you don't, I guess.
It was rainbows all over. Full Pride march in there.i didn't know it was called that. i've mostly had them accompanied by the extreme head pain and used to think it unbelievable that others claimed to have migraines but were walking around. when they come without the headache, it's still debilitating because you can't use your sight reliably, and closing your eyes makes no difference as it carries on behind your eyelids! don't think i've had the multi-coloured variety, though, mainly black and white
yay for rainbowsIt was rainbows all over. Full Pride march in there.
The best part was going through the phonebook to find the number to my doctor's office to see of they know what was going on (which of course they did). And realizing closing the wonky eye didn't do anything to improve the situation.![]()

Dr Katy Munro, a GP and headache specialist, suspects that I had a typical migraine with aura rather than a retinal migraine, as when I closed both my eyes, I could still see the shimmering pattern. If I was having a retinal migraine, the pattern would have disappeared when I closed the eye that was having the migraine. “Migraine aura is not dangerous. It’s uncomfortable and it’s quite debilitating and alarming when people get it because sometimes it comes on quite suddenly,” Munro says.
During a true retinal migraine, which produces the kind of patterns I saw, the spasming blood vessels at the back of the retina can lead to visual damage. “Sometimes there’s a kind of stroke that can mimic retinal migraine called amaurosis fugax – which means a fleeting visual disturbance – and that’s micro clots passing through the blood vessels,” Munro explains. “That’s why we would always urge people to go and get checked out by an eye specialist.”
