Why Most Headaches Come Down to Nutrition, Posture, and Deficiency, Not Just Stress
Aishwarya Kapoor | Times Life Bureau | Jul 16, 2026, 07:05 IST
Why Most Headaches Come Down to Nutrition, Posture, and Deficiency, Not Just Stress
Image credit : Times Life Bureau
Stress gets blamed for almost every headache, but the evidence points elsewhere. Magnesium deficiency, dehydration, and collapsed posture at a desk are responsible for far more cases than cortisol ever is. Fix the nutrition, fix the alignment, and the pain frequency drops, often without a single painkiller.
The stress explanation is too convenient
Magnesium deficiency and what it does to your head
Indian diets present a specific problem here. Refined rice, white bread, and heavily processed dals stripped of their bran lose most of their magnesium content. Jowar, bajra, rajgira, and dark leafy greens like methi and palak are among the richest sources, but urban eating patterns have pushed these to the margins. A person eating white rice twice a day with minimal greens is almost certainly running a magnesium deficit, and their recurring headaches may be the clearest sign of it.
Dehydration is doing more damage than most people account for
The dehydration problem is worse in Indian summers, where temperatures in cities like Nagpur, Ahmedabad, and Delhi regularly cross 42°C. People in air-conditioned offices often underestimate fluid loss because they are not sweating visibly. The recommendation is not eight glasses as a fixed number, it is enough fluid that urine stays pale yellow through the day. Caffeinated chai and coffee count toward fluid intake but also have mild diuretic effects at high doses, so they do not replace water.
Posture is a structural problem, not a lifestyle choice
Sustained muscle contraction in the suboccipital muscles at the base of the skull compresses the greater occipital nerve, generating pain that travels over the top of the head and behind the eyes. This is why people who sit at a laptop for six hours develop pain that feels exactly like a tension headache, because structurally, it is one. Adjusting screen height so the top of the monitor is at eye level, and keeping the ears stacked over the shoulders rather than jutting forward, reduces suboccipital compression substantially. No supplement corrects a mechanical problem.
What a pattern of recurring headaches is actually telling you
Pain relief through ibuprofen or paracetamol addresses the symptom but does nothing for magnesium levels or cervical alignment. Taken more than ten days a month, analgesics themselves can trigger medication-overuse headache, a condition recognized by the International Headache Society where the treatment becomes the cause.
The headache that arrives every Tuesday afternoon is not a stress response to Monday. It is a report from a body running low on something specific, and the body has been filing that report consistently, waiting for someone to read it.