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Stress On The Body

stress_on_the_bodyBy Kevin Ferrisi.

“Stress is the body’s reaction to any change that requires an adjustment or response,” defined by Wikipedia. The body reacts to these changes with physical, mental, and emotional responses to your ever changing surrounding environment. Stress is a normal part of life, as we all know to well. Many events that happen to you and around you, and many things that you do to yourself, put stress on your body. We need to become aware that you can experience stress from your environment, your body, and your thoughts. Your environment may not need to change, but it is how you react to your environment that can bring you peace of mind.

The human body is designed to experience stress and react to it. Stress can be positive, keeping us alert and ready to avoid danger at the drop of a dime. Stress becomes negative when a person faces continuous challenges without relief or relaxation between challenges. In other words if you don’t stop, like stop everything, every once and awhile and just do nothing, you do not allow your body to recover between obstacles. As a result, the person becomes overworked and stress related tension builds. The stress response is the body’s way of protecting you telling you it is time to take a break. When working properly, stress helps you stay focused, energetic, and alert. In emergency situations, stress can save your life sometimes offering you unexplained strength in certain situations. The stress response also helps you rise to meet challenges. Stress is what keeps you on your toes during a presentation at work and sharpens your concentration when you’re attempting something important. But beyond a certain point, stress stops being helpful and starts causing major damage to your health, your mood, your productivity, your relationships, and your quality of life, pretty much every area of your life.

It’s important to learn how to recognize when your stress levels are out of control. The most dangerous thing about stress is how easily you get used to it sometimes without realizing it. It starts to feel familiar, even normal, as if it is suppose to be a part of life. You don’t notice how much it’s affecting you. The signs and symptoms of stress overload can be almost anything. Stress affects the mind, body, and behavior in many ways, and everyone experiences stress differently. Not only can overwhelming stress lead to serious mental and physical health problems, it can also take a toll on your relationships at home, work, and school. Stress that continues without relief can lead to a condition called distress, a negative stress reaction. Distress can lead to physical symptoms including headaches, upset stomach, elevated blood pressure, chest pain, and problems sleeping. Research suggests that stress also can bring on or worsen certain symptoms or diseases. Imagine creating disease in your own body all because of the way you think? Doesn’t make sense, does it?

Here are 10 Tips that will help to relieve stress fast.
Written By Jeannette Moninger (WebMD)

1. Meditate – A few minutes of practice per day can help ease anxiety. “Research suggests that daily meditation may alter the brain’s neural pathways, making you more resilient to stress,” says psychologist Robbie Maller Hartman, PhD, a Chicago health and wellness coach. The process can be simple. Sit up straight with both feet on the floor. Close your eyes. Focus your attention on reciting, out loud or silently, a positive mantra such as “I feel at peace” or “I love myself.” Place one hand on your belly to synch the mantra with your breaths. Let any distracting thoughts float by like clouds.

2. Breathe Deeply – Give yourself a 5 minute break from whatever is bothering you and focus instead on your breathing. Sit up straight, eyes closed, with a hand on your belly. Slowly inhale through your nose, feeling the breath start in your abdomen and work its way to the top of your head. Reverse the process as you exhale through your mouth. “Deep breathing counters the effects of stress by slowing the heart rate and lowering blood pressure,” says psychologist Judith Tutin, PhD, a certified life coach in Rome, Ga.

3. Be Present – You rush through dinner, hurry to your next appointment, race to finish one more thing on your agenda. Now try something different: Slow down. “Take 5 minutes and focus on only one behavior with awareness,” says Tutin. Notice how the air feels on your face when you’re walking and how your feet feel hitting the ground. Enjoy the texture and taste of each bite of food as you slowly chew. When you spend time in the moment and focus on your senses, you should feel the tension leave your body.

4. Reach Out – A good social support system is one of the most important resources for dealing with stress. Talking to others , preferably face to face or at least on the phone, is a great way to better manage whatever is stressing you out.

5. Tune In to Your Body – Mentally scan your body to get a sense of how stress affects it each day. Lie on your back or sit with your feet on the floor. Start at your toes and work your way up to your scalp, noticing how your body feels. “Simply be aware of places you feel tight or loose without trying to change anything,” says Tutin. For 1 to 2 minutes, imagine each deep breath flowing to that body part. Repeat this process as you move your focus up your body, paying close attention to sensations you feel in each body part.

6. Decompress – Place a warm heat wrap around your neck and shoulders for 10 minutes. Close your eyes and relax your face, neck, upper chest, and back muscles. Remove the wrap and use a tennis ball or foam roller to massage away tension. “Place the ball between your back and the wall. Lean into the ball and hold gentle pressure for up to 15 seconds. Then move the ball to another spot and apply pressure,” says Cathy Benninger, a nurse at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center in Columbus.

7. Laugh Out Loud – A good belly laugh doesn’t just lighten the load mentally. It lowers cortisol, your body’s stress hormone, while increasing brain chemicals called endorphins that boost your mood. Lighten up by tuning in to your favorite sitcom or video, reading the comics, or chatting with someone who makes you smile.

8. Crank Up the Tunes – Research shows that listening to soothing music can lower blood pressure, heart rate, and anxiety. “Create a playlist of songs or nature sounds (the ocean, a bubbling brook, birds chirping) and allow your mind to focus on the different melodies, instruments, or singers in the piece,” suggests Benninger. You also can blow off steam by rocking out to more upbeat tunes , or singing at the top of your lungs!

9. Get Moving – You don’t have to run in order to get a runner’s high. All forms of exercise, from yoga to walking, can ease depression and anxiety by helping the brain release feel-good chemicals and by giving your body a chance to practice dealing with stress. You can go for a quick walk around the block, take the stairs up and down a few flights, or do some stretching exercises like head rolls and shoulder shrugs.

10. Be Grateful – Keep a gratitude journal or several (stash one by your bed, keep one in your purse, and one at work) to help you remember all the things that are good in your life. “Being grateful for your blessings cancels out negative thoughts and worries,” says Joni Emmerling, a wellness coach in Greenville, N.C.

Published on: Jan 8, 2014

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