Find Relief from Stiff Neck and Tension Headaches

Article At A Glance

Do you experience a stiff neck or tension headaches? Your suboccipital muscles may be the culprit. Suboccipitals are the eight small muscles located at the very base of your skull. They are the deepest muscles on the back of the neck, and they are involved in more subtle head movements like rocking and tilting of the head, as well as turning the head to one side. But what makes them particularly interesting is that they also stabilize the position of your head, which makes them deeply connected to your eyes and your vestibular system. Here are several yoga-based strategies for relieving tension in these muscles.

Do you ever get tension headaches? This feeling of a tight band wrapped around your head? Or maybe a stiff neck, a localized throbbing at the base of your skull that you want to press your thumbs into? If so, you are probably dealing with tension in suboccipital muscles that bloom like a lotus flower on the back of your head.

What Causes a Stiff Neck or Tension Headache?

 Stiff neck can occur at the suboccipitals -- small neck muscles.Suboccipitals are the eight small muscles located at the very base of your skull. They are the deepest muscles on the back of the neck, and they are involved in more subtle head movements like rocking and tilting of the head, as well as turning the head to one side. But what makes them particularly interesting is that they also stabilize the position of your head, which makes them deeply connected to your eyes and your vestibular system (that controls your balance).

Let’s conduct a little experiment. Place your thumbs at the base of your head in the little notches right underneath the bony parts. Apply a little bit of pressure there. While applying pressure with your thumbs, slowly move your eyes up and down, then right to left without moving your head. Do you feel any movement under your thumbs? Most of us will feel some movement at the base of the head when we move the eyes because suboccipital muscles contract in response to the movement of our eyes.

The Vestibular-Ocular Reflex and Why You Might Not Be Able to Read in a Moving Car

Pressure and stiff neck can originate at the Suboccipitals- 8 small muscles located at the base of the skull.

Your eyes and inner ears play an essential role in your ability to maintain balance. It is called a vestibular-ocular reflex (VOR), which refers to how the activation of the vestibular system in your inner ear causes eye movement. If you keep reading this text and somebody calls your name, you might turn your head toward the sound but keep your eyes fixed on the text. This is VOR in action. 

Your eyes will be moving in the opposite direction from your head. This happens when the head rotates in any direction (up, down, to the side, or in a circle). Your eyes will move exactly the opposite way to stabilize the image you were focusing on in your retinas. Without this reflex, the visual image would become blurred every time you move your head. This is particularly important because we do micro-head movements all the time; the head is never completely stable. Without this reflex, we would always get a smudged image of the reality in front of us, and we wouldn’t be able to read printed text.

Your inner ear, eyes, and suboccipital muscles work very closely together to hold your head steady and keep the image you see with your eyes steady as well. That is why you can get a headache or get dizzy if you are a passenger trying to read in a moving car. The constant motion of the car makes your eyes and your suboccipitals work overtime in their attempt to keep your head and the words in front of you steady to allow accurate processing of visual information.

How Screen Time Can Lead to Stiff Neck and Tension Headache

Things get even worse if you are trying to process visual information from your screen rather than a book because of:

  1. Constant Focusing and Refocusing

    “There is a difference in visual demand when one is viewing the display on the computer screen compared to reading a printed text. An image produced on the screen comprises thousands of tiny spots or pixels and rasters that collectively form the image. The margin of the image or a word is usually not sharp, and this worsens if the image or word is formed by minimal pixels, or what is known as low resolution. As the resolution goes down, the image becomes poor in quality, and a reader’s visual demand must be increased to appreciate the wording or image.” (1)

  2. Repetitive Action

    If you read a lot on your screen, the action of your eyes is very repetitive from left to right, from left to right. Your eyes follow the same path repeatedly, creating eye strain.

  3. Contrast and Glare

    “The contrast (intensity of the light) of the word to the background, the glare of the computer screen, and the reflection from the glass screen are all important factors determining the amount of visual demand one must put to perceive the image well.”(1)

And, of course, the smaller the screen, the harder your eyes have to work. You are also more likely to contort your body more while looking at the smaller screen.

Your eyes have to work hard to focus, and your suboccipitals must work hard to keep your head steady in your daily activities. If, on top of that, you look at your screen for long periods of time, keep your head in a poor position (where it is not balanced over your upper body), and do it all in an unstable environment (moving car, subway, train, etc.), you are placing additional strain on your eyes and suboccipitals, which can result in a stiff neck, pain at the top of your neck or behind your eyes, and tension headaches. Other factors that might contribute to suboccipital tension are whiplash and teeth grinding.

Yoga and Manual Pressure: Remedies for Stiff Neck and Tension Headache

Massage techniques can help to relieve neck pain and pressure and help alleviate stiff neck.

The two most common remedies suggested for suboccipital tension are manual pressure (where your manual therapist would cradle your head in a horizontal position and apply gentle pressure on suboccipital muscles) or some form of gentle traction (where your manual therapist would create a slight tugging action on the back of your neck in a horizontal position with your chin tucked in).

Yoga exercises offer pssible relief from stiff neck and neck pain.We can create similar actions ourselves in our yoga practice.

 Neck Roll Support

  1. To simulate gentle pressure on suboccipital muscles, you can roll up a hand towel tightly and place it under your neck in the supine position, ensuring that the towel is tucked close to the base of your head and that your neck feels fully supported. 
  2. Rest in that position for at least 5 minutes, breathing deeply and relaxing deeply into the pose.

 Gentle Chin Tuck

A yoga exercise like the chin tuck can help a student with a stiff neck.To simulate tracking action, we can work with Jalandhara bandha-like movement in different yoga poses and in a seated position. It works particularly well to add this movement to axial extension postures, like Half Standing Forward Bend Pose (Ardha Uttanasana), Tabletop Pose (Bharmanasana), and Head-to-Knee Pose (Janu Sirsasana). 

  1. First, move your head up and down a few times with your breath, and then tuck the chin in a bit and lengthen through the back of the neck, lifting the base of your head upwards. 
  2. Stay in that position for several breaths.

Everyday Strategies for Releasing Suboccipital Tension

Supported Child's Pose is a helpfulRestorative Pose for alleviating stiff neck or neck pain. strategies that help to deal with suboccipital tension include:

  • Modifying the ergonomics of your workspace and patterns of your body positioning to avoid neck strain
  • Releasing eye strain (including moving eyes independently from moving the head)
  • Gently warming up the neck (with basic flexion/extension, side bending and rotation)
  • Subtle movements of the head (like the image of the head floating over the shoulders)
  • Realigning the position of the head in relation to the upper body (working with posture)
  • Relaxing the neck in fully supported positions (like supported Child’s Pose (Bharmanasana), for example)
  • Using breath, sound, and imagery that calms down the nervous system (like Ujjayi Breath or Bee Breath).

A Short Breathing Practice for Loosening a Stiff Neck

Here is a short breathing practice that uses some of the elements described above. It focuses on:

  • Loosening up the neck and upper back
  • Creating better alignment between your head and upper body
  • Deepening your breath (especially the exhalation part)
  • Use subtle sounds to create a soothing vibration in your throat and neck

Give it a try and see how it feels for your neck. And if this doesn’t help with your neck tension, something else might be going on. 

Reprinted with permission from Sequence Wiz.

Educated as a school teacher, Olga Kabel has been teaching yoga for over 14 years. She completed multiple Yoga Teacher Training Programs but discovered the strongest connection to the Krishnamacharya/ T.K.V. Desikachar lineage. She had studied with Gary Kraftsow and American Viniyoga Institute (2004-2006) and received her Viniyoga Teacher diploma in July 2006, becoming an AVI-certified Yoga Therapist in April 2011. Olga is a founder and managing director of Sequence Wiz— a web-based yoga sequence builder that assists yoga teachers and yoga therapists in creating and organizing yoga practices. It also features simple, informational articles on how to sequence yoga practices for maximum effectiveness. Olga strongly believes in the healing power of this ancient discipline on every level: physical, psychological, and spiritual. She strives to make yoga practices accessible to students of any age, physical ability, and medical history, specializing in helping her students relieve muscle aches and pains, manage stress and anxiety, and develop mental focus.

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