Fresh Living

Fresh Living

How to Cure the Hiccups

posted by hrossi | 3:06pm Monday December 7, 2009

hiccup.jpgGuess what I’m doing every 30 seconds or so as I write this?  That’s right, my body is tensing into tiny convulsions accompanied by a noise that makes me grateful I work out of the privacy of my home. 

In other words, I’ve got the hiccups.  Meh.

After a couple of minutes of hiccuping, when I realize that they’re here for the foreseeable future, I start going through my bag of hiccup cures.  I’ll share my faves with you (and Valerie’s, whose brain I picked for #s 1 and 2) – please add yours!

5 Ways to Cure the Hiccups

1.  Eat a Spoonful of Sugar:  The power of a teaspoon of dry sugar to stop hiccups in their tracks has been documented by the New England Journal of Medicine and Mary Poppins alike.  So take your medicine!

2.  Distract Yourself:  Hiccups are a reflex, a nerve twitch that cycles through your body when something has irritated your diaphragm or one of the vagus nerves that run from the brain to the abdomen (incidental fun fact – the vagus nerve is what makes some of us pass out when we have violent stomach illnesses).  So to cure the hicks, distract yourself with any number of techniques that you’ve probably heard before – get someone to scare you, drink a glass of water from the far side of the glass, hold your breath and count backwards from 100, etc.

3.  Take an Antacid with Magnesium:  Did you know that magnesium is a natural muscle relaxer?  And did you know that hiccups are little more than muscle spasms?  Chew on an antacid tablet or two–many of them contain magnesium–to interrupt the twitch cycle and banish the hicks.

4.  Practice Prevention:  This one isn’t so helpful if you’re already hic-ing away your afternoon, but being over-full, eating spicy foods, and eating or drinking quickly are all known to cause hiccups.  So…don’t do that!     

5.  Breathe Tiny:  This is my go-to method for hiccup curing, and I swear on the soul of Fresh Living that I just now did it, and it stopped my hiccups cold.  Take a deep breath and exhale forcefully, visualizing your lungs getting small and tight, and your diaphragm sinking all the way down in your abdomen.  Visualize the hiccups as a bubble that your diaphragm is trying to pop like we used to sit on balloons when we were kids.  Then inhale and exhale really tiny breaths, not letting up on the ab-clenching, bubble-bursting pressure.  Hiccups?  What hiccups?

(image via: http://nycpeoplewatcher.wordpress.com/)
 
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Comments read comments(6)
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Valerie

posted December 8, 2009 at 11:11 am


Also I’d add my dad’s preferred method–drinking out of the “wrong” side of aglass of water. You bend over and sip from the lip farthest from you. So hard to do that your diaphragm is too distacted to hic or cup.



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Jamie

posted December 8, 2009 at 12:00 pm


My daughter got terrible hiccups and this remedy worked. Pick a small spot (on a wall, table) and stare at it while holding your breath and counting to 10, breathe out slowly and don’t swallow. It worked everytime with her and it’s worked with me.



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lee

posted December 8, 2009 at 5:57 pm


squeeze your abs really really tight to disrupt your diaphragm



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nobull

posted December 22, 2009 at 3:22 pm


I have used the drink water from the far side of of a glass while bending over method and it has worked for me every time!!! It is my understanding that it works by gulping more air than you just did which is what created the hiccups!!!



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Angela

posted December 23, 2009 at 10:58 am


this is an acupressure method a massage therapist friend of mine taught…it works in a matter of seconds. the only time it hasn’t worked is if hiccups are brought on by drinking alcohol.
the first two steps are to help you find thumb placement for acupressure. Face your palm upward and bend your wrist. Place your first three fingers of your opposite hand on your wrist, parallel to your bent wrist.
Place your thumb under your three fingers. Keeping your thumb in this position, move your three fingers to the back of the wrist and gently apply pressure.
Your thumb should be about three finger lengths away from the crease of your wrist (palm side), and your index finger should be directly on the other side of your wrist.



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Rosario19Silva

posted February 8, 2011 at 6:13 am


I would like to propose not to hold back until you earn enough money to buy different goods! You can just take the loans or financial loan and feel comfortable



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