Grace Dent To Replace Gregg Wallace On...
Film, Media & TV3 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by K99. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Your brain isn't fixed inside your head, its only attached to the spinal column and so can move around if excess force is applied, ie. bouncing up and down quite sharply.
If you're in danger of damaging it, it will let you know by giving you a headache so you stop. Your brain is telling you something - listen to it!
sholay is perfectly correct. The brain is not fixed in the skull, and violent movement causes the brain to press against the skull - it's called concussion.
If you violently bounce your body, the brain will press against the skull, not with enough force to do major damage, but enough to compress the mass of senstive nerves which send warning messages to the concious mind that this is potentially harmful. This is a headache - and as advised, you should stop until the neadache subsides, and then bounce more gently next time.
Dehydration may be a issue.
Normally the brain is cushioned in the skull by fluid, however, in cases where someone is dieting or dehydrated, the amount of fluid can be reduced to a dangerously low level (think walnut rattling around in a shell). Boxers are particularly susceptible to blood clots and damage to the brain, brought about because of the need for them to achieve their weight limits before a fight.
It can take several days of taking on fluids to redress the imbalance.
Lots on brains here if you have the time: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brain
Think of your brain as a big ball of fat on top of the spinal cord, floating in water inside your head - then wonder why it hurts if you bounce about a lot....
Motion is also sensed through the inner ear, so there could be link to you feeling the movement so much as well as feeling headaches, if there is a little infection present - not uncommon.