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RoseMeg451
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Can anyone tell me why St. Teresa of Avila is the patron saint of headache sufferers? I noticed this somewhere while looking at her writings, but I could not find why, and I am curious! Thanks!! 
I donāt know but I think she is also the patron saint of chess players - that might have something to do with it.Can anyone tell me why St. Teresa of Avila is the patron saint of headache sufferers? I noticed this somewhere while looking at her writings, but I could not find why, and I am curious! Thanks!!![]()
She was my Patron Saint I chose when I entered the Church this past Saturday.
One of Godās ācoincidencesā.Ok, I have to share this.
I went to a Womanās Retreat with my church this past weekend (ACTS).
The Director of the retreat chooses a patron for the weekend retreat.
Ourās was St. Theresa of Avila. The entire retreat was full of her messages. I had never heard of her before.
Ok, this is where is gets kinda weird.
We came home from the retreat Sunday and that evening I ended up with the worst migraine headache. I have NEVER in my life had one. It was awful. I was throwing up all night and was still sick yesterday. I had to leave work and go home and sleep. Now, today I feel better and since I wanted to learn more about St. Theresa I typed her name in the search on this forum and found this thread and low and behold learn she suffered from terrible migraines. Is this just coincidental? I just had to share.
By the way, the retreat was the most glorious thing to ever happen in my life. Iām a different person.
Elizabeth
Thanks for the clarification!One of Godās ācoincidencesā.BTW, St. Teresa of Jesus is her name; Avila is her address.
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Wow! Thank you so much for sharing that.Teresa and migraines were both essential elements in my spiritual growth, and now I see why. I have had them all my life, since age 9, climaxing in peri-menopause with 2-3 a month, some requiring hospitalization or ER. I learned those forced down-times were a gift from God for prayer and even contemplationāwordless, non-intellectual, since intellectual activity shuts down at the peak of an episode. Then I encountered Teresa on retreat, she personally guided me through understanding of stages of spiritual growth in ways I wont bother to detail, with assistance from wise spiritual director. To this day there is a particular little message she will send me when I need it. Migraines lessened with surgical menopause, change in meds, rigid adherence to diet and lifestyle mandates etc., and with spiritual progress. Now I get 2-3 a year, when needed to slow me down and humble me. Teresa is my gal, DD is named for her, so is MIL, so when I have episodes of conflict with either I have come to learn Big Teresa is telling me something I need to know in those āheadachesā as well.
EMAC, if you are near Diocese of Austin, you may want to check out this retreat on the Saint:Wow! Thank you so much for sharing that.
Is there a specific prayer that can be said for St. Teresaās intercedence if you are suffering from a migraine?Teresa and migraines were both essential elements in my spiritual growth, and now I see why. I have had them all my life, since age 9, climaxing in peri-menopause with 2-3 a month, some requiring hospitalization or ER. I learned those forced down-times were a gift from God for prayer and even contemplationāwordless, non-intellectual, since intellectual activity shuts down at the peak of an episode. Then I encountered Teresa on retreat, she personally guided me through understanding of stages of spiritual growth in ways I wont bother to detail, with assistance from wise spiritual director. To this day there is a particular little message she will send me when I need it. Migraines lessened with surgical menopause, change in meds, rigid adherence to diet and lifestyle mandates etc., and with spiritual progress. Now I get 2-3 a year, when needed to slow me down and humble me. Teresa is my gal, DD is named for her, so is MIL, so when I have episodes of conflict with either I have come to learn Big Teresa is telling me something I need to know in those āheadachesā as well.