Saltar al contenido
  • Producto
  • Cómo funciona
  • Evidencia clínica
  • Para médicos clínicos
  • Producto
  • Cómo funciona
  • Evidencia clínica
  • Para médicos clínicos
+1 844.475.7100
US Estados Unidos
Europa Europa
Canadá Canadá
Otro Otro
  • Producto
  • Cómo funciona
  • Evidencia clínica
  • Para médicos clínicos
  • Producto
  • Cómo funciona
  • Evidencia clínica
  • Para médicos clínicos
+1 844.475.7100
US Estados Unidos
Europa Europa
Canadá Canadá
Otro Otro
Home > Migraine and Mental Health Challenges: Shruti’s Story of Living Through More Than One Battle
2 de mayo de 2025

Migraine and Mental Health Challenges: Shruti’s Story of Living Through More Than One Battle

By Danielle Vinci | The Migraine Circle by CEFALY

Living with migraine means fighting two battles every day: the battle to function and feel better — and the battle to be seen, heard, and understood.

Migraine and mental health: an intertwined experience

This truth sits at the heart of our latest conversation on The Migraine Circle Podcast by CEFALY, where I was joined by Shruti Shivaramakrishnan — an advocate, artist, creator, and the voice behind @chronicallymeh. If you live with migraine, chronic illness, or invisible pain, Shruti’s story will feel like a warm, honest mirror. She doesn’t sugarcoat her experience, and that’s what makes her messages so meaningful.

Shruti’s journey: Growing up with migraine and mental health struggles

Shruti's first encounters with migraine started at just six years old, long before she had the words to describe the overwhelming mix of pain, fear, and sensory overload she was feeling. Diagnosed at an early age, she recalls a confusing and frustrating journey that was marked by misdiagnoses and a lack of understanding about how migraine impacts the brain and body.

But migraine wasn’t the only battle. As Shruti puts it, “For me, mental health challenges came first — or at the same time. I was having to work harder to just be normal.” Over the years, she’s come to understand that her mental health and migraine are deeply intertwined. Flare-ups in one often fuel the other.

Building a migraine and mental health management toolkit

When Shruti moved to Canada during the pandemic, she was told she'd have to wait over two years to see a specialist. That's when she took matters into her own hands and invested in a CEFALY device.

"CEFALY was the first tool that gave me any sense of control," Shruti says. "It helped me feel like I had something I could rely on." When attacks hit hard, knowing she had a device by her side made the difference - not only for her pain, but for her anxiety.

From there, her toolkit began to grow. Today it includes therapy, medication, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), aromatherapy, FL-41 glasses, ice packs, art, music, and even carefully chosen clothes for flare-up days. "You can never have too many tools," Shruti says. "Different days need different kinds of help."

Get Drug-Free Migraine Relief With CEFALY

Garantía de devolución de dinero de 90 días
FDA-Cleared
Financing available

Gentle grounding practices for migraine and anxiety relief

While she's built a robust care routine, one non-negotiable remains: alone time. "That's what grounds me," she says. "Even if I get home at 2:30 a.m., I'm up at 4:30 to get that quiet moment." Whether it's tea, journaling, yoga, or just sitting in silence, that early solitude sets the tone for her day and helps calm her nervous system.

One grounding technique she learned through pain reprocessing therapy is to focus on a body part that doesn’t hurt. “I touch my nose, because I can’t really feel it, and that reminds me that not all of me is in pain. Somehow, that helps.”

How Shruti advocates for herself through brain fog and fear

Despite how openly Shruti shares her experience online, she still struggles to speak up in doctor’s offices. “My mouth goes dry. My heart races. It feels like I’m about to take an exam.” That’s why she now prepares scripts using tools like ChatGPT, so she can advocate for herself even through brain fog and fear.

Her advice to others? "Admit to yourself that you're struggling. Ask for help. Try new things. And trust that you will find what works for you."

“Admit to yourself that you’re struggling. Ask for help. Try new things. And trust that you will find what works for you.”

Understanding that migraine and mental health recovery isn’t linear

Shruti reminds us that the migraine treatment journey isn't linear. Some days are red, some yellow, some green. That's why she uses a color-coded "traffic light" tracker for her symptoms. "It's fun to color, even on bad days. And it keeps me from spiraling into overanalyzing everything."

For Shruti, managing both migraine and mental health means giving herself grace. "There's no race here. Nobody's handing out prizes for pushing through pain. The most powerful thing we can do is move at our own pace."

When I asked her for a mantra she holds onto during the hardest days, Shruti didn’t hesitate: “One breath at a time.”


Want to learn more about Shruti’s journey and the tools that help her cope?
Visit@chronicallymeh on Instagram, and explore more migraine and mental health resources at cefaly.com.

Your pain is real. Your path to healing doesn't have to be perfect. It just has to be yours.

Try CEFALY for migraine relief

Don’t let migraine pain stop you from living your life. If you’re ready to try CEFALY, purchase your device today with our 90-day money-back guarantee.

Related Posts:

  • Explore-the-Connection-Migraine-and-PTSD
    Explore the Connection: PTSD and Migraine 
  • Managing Episodic Migraine with Yoga and Holistic Care: An Interview with Adriane Dellorco
    Managing Episodic Migraine with Yoga and Holistic…
  • Blog-Post-Images-7-1200x600
    The Path to Self-Advocacy While Living with Migraine
  • Blog-Post-Images-12
    Hormonal Migraine Relief: How to Manage Symptoms and…
  • The Migraine Myths Holding You Back from Better Days
    The Migraine Myths Holding You Back from Better Days
  • What Is Complex Migraine?
    What Is Complex Migraine?
← Previous Post
Next Post →

Search the CEFALY Blog

Recent Posts

  • A mom with short brown hair hugs her son while wearing the CEFALY migraine device "CEFALY Gave Me My Life Back": Camille's Search for a Drug-Free Migraine Treatment
  • Episodic migraine vs chronic migraine What Patients Need to Know About Episodic Migraine vs. Chronic Migraine
  • A woman smiles while holding a model of the human brain "That's When I Realized: I Have Migraine." Beth's Empowerment Story
  • A glossy black CEFALY migraine device on a blue background The CEFALY Technology Origin Story: 20+ Years of Migraine Innovation
  • Unable to Tolerate Migraine Medication, She Turned to CEFALY: Lori's Migraine Story

Categories

  • Aplicación CeCe
  • CEFALY Education
  • La experiencia CEFALY
  • Clinician's Corner
  • Customer Testimonials
  • Healthcare
  • Living with Migraine
  • Men's Health
  • Mental Health
  • El ABC de la migraña
  • Migraine Info
  • Historias de migrañas
  • Factores desencadenantes de las migrañas
  • Seasonal Triggers
  • Veteranos
  • Women's Health

Últimas publicaciones

a woman holding a red apple in her left hand and a green apple in her right hand
CEFALY Education

La guía esencial de dispositivos médicos para la migraña

CEFALY is an FDA-cleared medical device that targets the main pathway for migraine pain: the trigeminal nerve (the…

24 de mayo de 2024
Leer más →
A mom with short brown hair hugs her son while wearing the CEFALY migraine device
CEFALY Journey Customer Testimonials Living with Migraine Migraine Stories Migraine Triggers

“CEFALY Gave Me My Life Back”: Camille’s Search for a Drug-Free Migraine Treatment

I've lived with migraine since my second pregnancy with my daughter. That pregnancy marked the beginning of my…

27 de enero de 2026
Leer más →
Episodic migraine vs chronic migraine
Customer Testimonials Healthcare Living with Migraine Migraine Stories Migraine Triggers Women's Health

What Patients Need to Know About Episodic Migraine vs. Chronic Migraine

While official definitions classify episodic migraine as fewer than 15 headache days per month and chronic migraine as…

2 de enero de 2026
Leer más →
  • Aplicación CEFALY
  • Buscar un proveedor
  • Para médicos clínicos
  • Aplicación CEFALY
  • Buscar un proveedor
  • Para médicos clínicos
AYUDA
Programar entrenamiento
Preguntas frecuentes
Electrodos
Aplicación CEFALY
Encuentre un proveedor certificado
Guía rápida para comenzar
Devoluciones y garantía
Contáctenos
Blog
PROFESIONAL
Para médicos clínicos
Estudios clínicos
SEGUROS Y BENEFICIOS
Elegible para cuentas HSA/FSA
EMPRESA
Nosotros
Comentarios
Empleos
Afiliados
Influenciadores

Política de privacidad

Términos de servicio

Política de devolución

Política de cookies

No vender mis datos personales

La aplicación CEFALY Migraine Relief, el dispositivo CEFALY Connected y los servicios de asesoramiento aún no están disponibles en la UE.
© 2026 CEFALY. Todos los derechos reservados.

Se ha detectado un cambio de región

Revisando ts región...