A Gothic Migraine

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15 years ago, when I first started thinking about going back to university to do my PhD, I considered studying Gothic Literature and its relationship with Gothic Architecture (both the original Medieval version, and the neo-gothic copies that were being made in the late 1800s – early 1900s).

In preparation for any future studies, (and because I discovered how enjoyable “sublime terror” could be), I read a huge amount of early gothic literature.

One of the things that I noticed then, and randomly thought about again the other day, is how much the titles of several books embraced a tenuous interpretation of an uncertain reality.

“The story of Dorian Gray” (1890) for example, by Oscar Wilde, is about a man who is able to live a sinful life but retain his innocent appearance, because his portrait-painting bears the brunt of his transgressions instead of his living self.  But even if you didn’t read a single page of the story, the word “Gray” gives you a hint of a life lived in a liminal state, which is neither definitively black or white, good or evil, young or old… (a bit like my post about living in the orange-zone.)

R.L. Stevenson’s “Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde” (1886) also implies there are two types of people, and again, the name hints at something that needs to be read between the lines; Jekyll holds the essence of a heckling-jackal, whilst Hyde is both secretive and animalistic.  As the story unfolds, we discover the plot secret is that the two men are one and the same; the light and shadow of the same self.

In Charlotte Brontë’s “Jane Eyre” (1847), the gothic aspects come from intermittent events; the possibly haunted Red Room, a lightening-struck tree, disembodied voices drifting over the moors, and of course the mad woman in the attic.  Here, the title is subtle, but still significant, used as a foreshadowing clue.  Eyre = air-heir (inheritance) = two things any orphan needs to survive.

Perhaps my favorite Gothic nightmare is one that was written with a feminist bent.  It is the short story “The Yellow Wallpaper” (1892) by Charlotte Perkins Gilman.  It’s worth a read, so I won’t spoil it, but it involves a depressed young lady moving into an attic room for some “rest therapy”.  As time passes, goodwill versus gas-lighting, cure versus curse, solitude as treatment versus abandonment, bedroom versus prison, all become as confusingly intertwined as the knotted-scrolls of the curlicue design of the room’s “sunny” > “jaundiced” yellow wallpaper.

At the risk of making this post a bit longer than normal, all the reminiscing about haunted bedrooms prompted me to write a migraine-related gothic short-short story of my own.  First, let me say that it is genre-true in its attempted darkness, so I guess I should offer a trigger-warning and, secondly, the story is a form of faction (factual fiction – but I’m ok – truly).  Lastly, remember that I’m no author – so as you read, be curious and critical, but kind…

Until next time, take care, and stay sunny, Linda x

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She woke from a dream in which her double bed was being gnawed by termites.  It left her feeling incredibly unnerved, given she slept in an old bedframe made of iron.  What sort of pincer-teeth must an ant have to chew through metal?  A moment later, her attention shifted to her own face.  The pain was still there.  The pain was always still there.  It felt as if someone was stabbing her in the eye.  Not once, quickly and aggressively, but leisurely, with a blunt butterknife, turning it back and forth as it burrowed through the soft jelly of her eyeball and then into her brain.  Her hand drifted to her face, and found, as always, an eyeball intact, no gaping-wound, no slick and bloody mess, nothing in fact, that would justify the aching.

She glanced around her gloomy 3 by 3 meter bedroom and wondered whether it was dawn or dusk.  She rolled over, carefully, to avoid triggering another bout of vomiting, and read the clock.  Slowly, she moved numbers around in her head until she eventually arrived at a conclusion; 40.  She had been sick in bed with a migraine for 40 hours.

“32 to go”, she mumbled, acknowledging that most of her migraines lasted a full three days.  There was some comfort in knowing she was past the halfway mark, and yet, the relief evaporated with the realisation there were so many more hours of agony to go.

Still lying on her side, her sore eye buried in the pillow, she blinked and heard the raspy up-down of her eyelashes; too loud.  She listened to the sound of her heartbeat transferred strangely to her jawline; too loud.  She heard the children next door as they arrived home from school; way too loud.  She tugged the pillow over her face to muffle their joy, briefly imagining the pillow pulled further over, harder down.

Through the feathers, she heard a new sound.  Subtle but persistent.  It had the grind of an ancient roller-shutter closing under duress.  There was no roller shutter in her loft-apartment.  She released the pillow and heard the sound again, louder this time; thump, thud, whistle, whine, impossible to define, yet definitely mechanical.  Or, architectural, perhaps.  As if something in her room was under construction. 

It was the sound of her migraine, she realized, whilst knowing that was not possible.  The noise was pain itself; frustration, resistance, halting humiliation, followed by a long loneliness… and then after a brief pause it started up again.  Pause and pound, pause and pound, a pulsating manifestation of her illness.

Reluctantly, she pulled herself into a seated position and tried to determine where the sound-sensation was coming from.  The walls.  The sound was definitely coming from behind the walls.  No.  Wait.  The sound was not coming from behind the walls… it was coming from the walls themselves.  Three of her four walls had moved closer to her bed.  Her room was now only 2 meters by 2 meters wide. 

A wave of nausea caused her to clench her teeth and screw her eyes shut.  She waited, allowing herself to ride the wave, and then looked again.  There!  This time, she saw it happen; as the grating sound occurred – the walls moved.   And a moment later, they did it again!  In fact, the walls had almost reached her bed.  In a few moments more they would be pushing against her bed… against her…

She crawled into the middle of her bed and rose into a squatting position.  She was as far from the walls as she could be, when they banged into her bedframe.  The thump, thud, whistle, whine, now had a new scrapey-achey edge to it as the metal bedframe began to buckle and twist.

With a bang, the legs of the bed collapsed, and the mattress folded up around her.  For the briefest of seconds, she imagined herself as snug as a bug in the center of a flower, gentle petals enfolding her… but no… she was in danger… and unable to escape… the encasing-mattress was smothering her.  Still, her mind rebelled against reality, and she imagined herself in a cocoon, a place of restful protection and transformative power.  As she began to feel the familiar crush of concrete on skull, however, she took one last breath from within her linen-lined coffin and silently cursed the universe. 

When she woke from her broken, pain-filled sleep, she was gasping from yet another nightmare in which she had been trapped in her bedroom, devoured by her own disappointment…

And yet, as she touched her face to feel the pain that was always there, she knew she had not slept for days… the horror was real.

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40 responses to “A Gothic Migraine”

  1. A Halloween story – The Mindful Migraine Avatar

    […] my last little narrative experiment on my blog post labelled “A Gothic Migraine” I went away and spent the next month writing a handful of short stories that gave migraines […]

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  2. elkement Avatar

    You are a great writer!!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Thank you 🥰

      Like

  3. merrildsmith Avatar

    I never thought of a relationship between gothic architecture and gothic literature. I think all of the authors were probably intimately aware of pain, for themselves or loved ones. The Brontës all died young. People often suffered from chronic pain then for diseases and conditions for which there were no cures, and also, the use of morphine and its derivatives like laudanum became more common in the 19th century. I’m sure you know this, I’m just waking up. 😉 Anyway, I’m sorry you’ve experienced this.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      There was so much going on at that time… it was turn of the century, so people were half-traditional-half-modern… it would have been exciting and confusing… weapons could do more damage than medicine could cure… illnesses were still mysterious… so dark, but on the cusp of a new dawn… thank you for visiting… You’re always welcome here! xx

      Liked by 1 person

      1. merrildsmith Avatar

        You’re very welcome! xx

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          🌞

          Liked by 1 person

  4. Pooja G Avatar

    I love the gothic theme in books. Jane Eyre is one of my top 5 and I love The story of Dorian Gray as well. Really enjoyed your story, definitely had the haunting gothic vibe. As someone who gets migraines, it was even scarier.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      I’m very chuffed – thank you Pooja – coming from you that means a lot – I think the horror of migraines is hard to articulate to those who don’t “get it”… it was cathartic to write, and I think there is a lot of synergy between the genre and the condition! (enjoy your weekend xx)

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Pooja G Avatar

        It’s true, it’s hard to explain what they’re like to those that don’t get migraines. Have a great rest of your weekend too.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          🥰🌞🥳

          Liked by 1 person

  5. Poetic Spirit Avatar

    Great storyteller ❤️.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Yay, thank you – it’s a bit darker than my blog tries to be… but it was ‘fun’ (cathartic) to write. xx

      Liked by 1 person

  6. James Viscosi Avatar

    Ahhh, yes, the yellow wallpaper … I remember that one well! Creepy story about the walls closing in ― it had a little taste of Lovecraft to it!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Yes! I agree – pre-Lovecraft… another writer I’d forgotten about… messed with your mind… you never really knew where you stand in his stories… which makes the dread all the more intense!

      Liked by 1 person

  7. D. Wallace Peach Avatar

    What an interesting look at Gothic titles. It’s quite a unique genre, the tone and eeriness different than horror. And your story… wow. I was completely immersed. Everything about it – word choice, sentence length, sensory details – all were excellent. The super-tight POV was fabulous and I think I held my breath the whole way through.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Oh wow – thank you! That’s very kind… and yes… Gothic is a fab genre, leaning into the eerie rather than the horror as you say… “holding your breathe all the way through” is sort of what people in a migraine attack do – so thank you for feeling that! xx

      Liked by 1 person

      1. D. Wallace Peach Avatar

        I’ve never had a migraine, and after reading your story, I hope I never do!

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          Then my job is done! You have learnt something about what it is like to live with migraine! (I might have a go at writing some longer stories … maybe for Halloween!)

          Liked by 1 person

          1. D. Wallace Peach Avatar

            You have the writing chops to accomplish it. 🙂

            Liked by 1 person

            1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

              🥰

              Liked by 1 person

  8. Content Catnip Avatar

    Excellent summary of gothic elements in these novels. I remember reading the Picture of Dorian Gray years ago and absolutely loved it! These liminal and gothic elements are sublime I agree. For me peak gothic was Dracula by Bram Stoker. However I haven’t read Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde this is definitely on my ‘to read’ list. Your summary whetted my appetite for more of these darker novels so thank you. I didn’t know about your PhD what an interesting and cool topic 😎 👍

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Ohhhh… Dracula is another great one… Frankenstein is another favorite I forgot to mention… I should have; given that the ‘monster’ is a hybrid creature, dead and alive, broken and complete…
      [in the end I shifted my PhD subject slightly… but it still start with gothic architecture!]

      Liked by 1 person

  9. Darryl B Avatar

    Great post! Gives one an inkling of what the world of migraines must be like 😢

    I saw “Yellow Wallpaper” on one of the streaming platforms a while back… very creepy, ominous, as you mentioned 😱

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Thank you for reading – I didn’t realize there was a ‘movie’ of Yellow Wallpaper… I’ll have to track it down… the story seemed so ‘normal’ at first, but slowly, slowly, slipped into a nightmare…

      Liked by 1 person

  10. KC Avatar

    Love the twist. Excellent classics mentioned too. 😉🌹

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Yay, thanks ☺️

      Liked by 1 person

  11. Skyseeker/nebeskitragac Avatar

    I love the tension in the story as the walls start closing around her. I was hoping the walls are gonna crush her and her spirit will be set free and enjoy the Universe, but she woke up. As we all do. 😀

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      I briefly thought about something similar, but I couldn’t bring myself to hurt someone, even in make believe land! Waking up is always a plot “cop out”… but it was kinder!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Skyseeker/nebeskitragac Avatar

        You are really gentle soul Linda. 😀 I also don’t like hurting anyone, even in my stories.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          🥰🥳🌞
          (thank you and yay us!)
          Linda xx

          Liked by 1 person

          1. Skyseeker/nebeskitragac Avatar

            😊

            Liked by 1 person

  12. Sheila Avatar

    A thrilling story to say the least. Feeling trapped by an illness is something I can relate to.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Yeah me too… it was very cathartic to write… I just worry about leaning into darkness when I’m trying to be uplifting!! 🙃

      Liked by 1 person

  13. joannerambling Avatar

    This caused a shiver to run through my body, like someone walked over my grave, if you know the saying but I did kind of like it

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Gothic literature was all about sublime terror… a pleasant dread… the shiver is a compliment! But it’s still a bit darker than the normal me…

      Like

  14. Michael Williams Avatar

    I really liked how you characterized the titles and the mood of gothic as a “tenuous interpretation of an uncertain reality”. also, I now know the definition of the word “liminal” thanks to your post 🙂

    when I used to think of gothic writing or just the gothic period/influence in general, there was just something so elusive about it. because you described it the way you did, I have a better sense in articulating it. indeed, when you think about it, the mood of a gothic inspired work “feels” like a dangerous vacuum or an absence of something incalculable.

    I like to think that perhaps, during this time, there was a sense that the veneer separating man from his nature was too thin and the contrast was too startling for anyone who engaged in any type of existential thought – kind of like the way future dystopian cities are portrayed in science fiction sagas. And of course, this would carry staggering consequences towards questions of what comprises reality and/or what makes for meaning. I can only imagine that living in a perpetual state of upheaval can only weaken people and reduce them to only the pursuit of survival.

    great post! Mike

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Ohhhh…. “dangerous vacuum” is a great way to describe gothic… it creates room for the imagination to face its demons… I often think that it must have been such a big deal for those living at the turn of the century, who literally had a foot in each century- they were straddling the past and modernity, history and a strange scientific future… hard to imagine how startling a room filled with electric light must have been; all those corner shadows cast aside, and new, harsher ones revealed by the starker light… thanks for visiting… and giving me more to think about!!

      Liked by 2 people

      1. Michael Williams Avatar

        my pleasure! 🙂 thank you for such a great write up!

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          🥰

          Like

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