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Harnessing Stress
Stress has become a fact
of life, and for some, the daily norm. Although occasional stress
can help improve our focus and performance, living with chronic
stress can backfire by causing anxiety, depression, and serious
health problems.
Understanding who we are, knowing our major struggles, putting them
in perspective, and taking action can help us deal with stress. The
following strategies can also improve stress tolerance and help
lessen the effects of stress on our health.
Think Positively
“Adopting the right attitude can convert a negative stress into
positive,” said Hans Selye, author of the groundbreaking work around
stress theory. When optimism is hard to muster, cognitive-behavioral
therapy, which trains people to recognize negative thinking patterns
and replace them with more constructive ones, can also help reduce
the risk of chronic stress and depression.
Get Out and Enjoy Nature
While modern civilization has made our lives more convenient, it has
deprived us of an essential source of stress relief—connection with
nature. Studies show that interacting with nature can help lessen
the effects of stress on the nervous system, reduce attention
deficits, decrease aggression, and enhance spiritual well-being.
“Smell the Roses” for Better Mood
Aromatherapy, or smelling essential plant oils, recognized worldwide
as a complementary therapy for managing chronic pain, depression,
anxiety, insomnia, and stress-related disorders, can help you
unwind. Orange and lavender scents, in particular, have been shown
to enhance relaxation and reduce anxiety.
Relax with a Cup of Tea
During stressful times, coffee helps us keep going. To give yourself
a break, however, consider drinking tea. Research shows that
drinking tea for 6 weeks helps lower post-stress cortisol and
increase relaxation. Habitual tea drinking may also reduce
inflammation, potentially benefiting your heart health.
Laugh It Off
Humor relieves stress and anxiety and prevents depression, helping
put our troubles in perspective. Laughter can help boost the immune
system, increase pain tolerance, enhance mood and creativity, and
lower blood pressure, potentially improving treatment outcomes for
many health problems, including cancer and HIV. Humor may also be
related to happiness, which has been linked to high self-esteem,
extroversion, and feeling in control.
Build a Support System
Relationships are also key to health and happiness, especially for
women. Women with low social support, for example, are more likely
to increase blood pressure under stress. Loneliness may also
contribute to stress in both men and women, also leading to poorer
outcomes after a stroke or congestive heart failure. On the other
hand, active and socially involved seniors are at lower risk for
dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. Social support also helps cancer
patients to boost the immune system and maintain a higher quality of
life.
Employ the Relaxing Power of Music
Music, especially classical, can also serve as a powerful
stress-relief tool. Listening to Pachelbel’s famous Canon in D major
while preparing a public speech helps avoid anxiety, heart rate, and
blood pressure, which usually accompany public speaking.
Singing and listening to music can also relieve pain and reduce
anxiety and depression caused by low back pain. Group drumming also
showed positive effects on stress relief and the immune system.
Music therapy can also elevate mood and positively affect the immune
system in cancer patients and reduce fatigue and improve
self-acceptance in people with multiple sclerosis.
To help people deal with stressful medical procedures, music can
help reduce anxiety before surgery. When played during surgery, it
can decrease the patient’s post-operative pain. Aiding recovery, a
dose of calming music may lower anxiety, pain, and the need for
painkillers.
Calm Your Mind
In recent decades, many forms of meditation have gained popularity
as relaxation and pain relief tools. Focusing on our breath, looking
at a candle, or practicing a non-judgmental awareness of our
thoughts and actions can help tune out distractions, reduce anxiety
and depression, and accept our circumstances. In cancer patients,
meditation-based stress reduction enhances quality of life, lowers
stress symptoms, and potentially benefits the immune system.
Guided imagery, such as visualizing pictures prompted by an
audiotape recording, also shows promise in stress relief and pain
reduction. Based on the idea that the mind can affect the body,
guided imagery can be a useful adjunct to cancer therapy, focusing
patients on positive images to help heal their bodies.
Enjoy the Warmth of Human Touch
Just as the mind can affect the body, the body can influence the
mind. Virginia Satir, a famous American psychotherapist, once said
that people need 4 hugs a day to help prevent depression, 8 for
psychological stability, and 12 for growth. While asking for hugs
may not work for some, massage can help us relieve stress and reduce
anxiety and depression. Massage has also been shown to reduce
aggression and hostility in violent adolescents, to improve mood and
behavior in students with ADHD, and to lead to better sleep and
behavior in children with autism.
Massage has other therapeutic properties, as well. Regular massage
may reduce blood pressure in people with hypertension and may lead
to less pain, depression, and anxiety and better sleep in patients
with chronic low-back pain. Compared to relaxation, massage therapy
also causes greater reduction in depression and anger, and more
significant effects on the immune system in breast cancer patients.
Give Exercise a Shot
To get the best of both worlds, affecting the mind through the body
while getting into good physical shape, try exercise. In one study,
a group of lung cancer patients increased their hope due to
exercise. Exercise can also reduce depression and improve wound
healing in the elderly. Tai chi, which works for people of all ages,
may enhance heart and lung function, improve balance and posture,
and prevent falls, while reducing stress.
No matter what stress-relief methods you choose, make it a habit to
use them—especially if you feel too stressed out to do it. As
someone once said, the time to relax is when you don’t have time for
it. For more information on what stress is and how it affects us
while on the job, click here.
Source: American
Chiropractors Association |
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