What Exercise is Best to Help Reduce Stress?

What Exercise is Best to Help Reduce Stress?What exercise is best to help reduce stress?

The type which does not add more stress!

Everyone is different.

For some, they come back from a ten-mile run, and they feel relaxed.  Others come back from a similar run and are exhausted, more stressed than when they left because their bodies hurt so much and others can’t do without the exhilaration of pushing their bodies to the nth degree – somehow the pain is satisfying.

And for yet others, a long walk or yoga gives them a wonderful feeling.  Their bodies react well.  For others, yoga is too slow or they don’t have the flexibility to deal with all the poses. And for others, Pilates is ideal.

Weights are a favorite for certain people.  They “pump iron” for hours every day and the cardio represents an interruption into what they love.  Others can’t stand going to the gym and especially lifting weights.

Many people enjoy sports.  One person told me that he plays sports all year round and would never dream of going to the gym.

The important factor

The most important thing to your exercise program – and yes, exercise is critical to stress reduction – is that you enjoy what you’re doing!

Why?  Because you’ll actually do it!  You’ll look forward to your exercise time and have no trouble keeping it up because of the incredible benefits you receive from it -

Benefits of Regular Exercise

Besides handling stress much better, regular exercise has many benefits:

the obvious ones are:

  • burn fat
  • increase cardiovascular functioning
  • increase the good feeling endorphins

the not so obvious

  • better functioning  organs
  • increased blood flow to the brain
  • clearing up metabolic waste products
  • helping posture
  • maintaining good lung capacity and therefore more oxygen throughout your body for good health
  • helping to avert disease and can even reverse some diseases

Is there anything else which can help the body and reduce stress?

Yes.  Deep breathing, stretching, massage, aromatherapy, meditation.  Each one has physiological benefits for the body.  Again, it’s a matter of preference though this last four can benefit anyone who indulge in their own way.  For instance, meditation is not necessarily sitting crossed legged in a quiet room reciting the same word over and over again.  Meditation for some can be sitting in the park watching squirrels run up and down the trees and admiring beautiful flowers or listening to a brook.

Aromatheraphy can be simply using your favorite scented hand cream and a massage can simply be rubbing your temples or using a massage wand or chair.

Throughout the day you can:-

  • stretch -  stand up every couple of hours and touch your toes, lean backwards slightly, lean your head side to side and front to back, rotate shoulders, stretch arm triceps overhead, stretch hamstrings – just 5 minutes and you can feel refreshed.  You can find a lot of stretching.  Here’s a couple of videos from YouTube – you can find a lot of videos on YouTube
  • Throughout the day, take 10 deep breaths as often as possible.  Make the breath reach as far down and across as possible.
  • While standing, be conscious of your posture – adjust accordingly and breath.
  • If you can, meditate for 5 or 10 minutes at breaks or lunch hours.
  • just sitting and enjoying peace and quiet

There are many, many avenues for relaxation of the body and of the mind – you’ll find quite a few videos on YouTube and elsewhere – this has just been a sampling to give you an idea – you might just find something you really enjoy.

Exercise is a key to good health and reducing stress in your life if you love what you are doing.  Here is one instance in which loving the method of exercise is critical and adding different ways to reduce the stress in your body holds incredible benefits.

Lorraine Arams

http://www.wizetime.com


The 3 Most Important Time Management Tools

BURN OUT . . . CAN YOU RECOGNIZE IT?

BURN OUT . . . CAN YOU RECOGNIZE IT?

You sit looking at the pile.  Stare into space.  Your body hurts from the stress.  Your mind goes from frantic to dead quiet. 

You know you have to get the report done for tomorrow and you haven’t even started.  Worse yet, you don’t want to start.  You don’t want to do anything except sit and stare blankly at the wall. 

And that’s burn outno energy or willingness to go on with anything knowing full well what the consequences will be – somehow you don’t care and yet you are very worried.  Your whole life has become an incessant world of push and pull – you want to but you don’t; you know what to do but you don’t have the energy; you know the consequences and you don’t care; you don’t care but you worry. 

The drag is the worst part – you seem to be dragging yourself around everywhere you go in everything you do in everything you say – it’s all heavy, really heavy like you’re pulling a monster truck every inch of the way!

Physically you’ll feel exhausted and you often get tension headaches or severe lower back pain for no apparent reason – you never had them before but now they become a regular occurrence.  Sometimes, the lower back pain is so intense, you can’t even walk!

You have small accidents quite regularly – stubbing your toe, dropping things, and absent-minded run ins with chairs, walls, etc.

You check your work over and over again – yet there are still small mistakes like spelling or reversed numbers.  You’re horrified by the small mistakes instead of taking them as they are – small!

 Spiritually you feel empty, totally disconnected from everyone and everything.  You just wish everyone would leave you alone.  People just seem to add to the feeling of being burdoned and you don’t reach out for help either.  Everything is meaningless to you – everyone another stress.

Emotionally you sense you don’t have time to get anything accomplished.  You really want to distance yourself from everyone so you can get something done.  You don’t visit with friends any more.  You stop going to the gym.  You stay at work longer and longer and longer and less and less done.  Soon you feel like a martyr and soon a loser because you see everyone around you going home on time and yet there you sit.  You sit trying to accomplish the smallest tasks that seems to take forever.

Your calendar is filled with missed deadlines and you wonder why – you got everything done before, why not now?  Appealing to you are the escape mechanisms like alcohol, spending, drugs or even sex.  However, at some point in the burn out process, you couldn’t be bothered with these things either.  In fact, you know you have to get your act together but you don’t want to.

Every happy moment experienced by others is one that makes you feel even worse.  If someone gets engaged or has a baby or a birthday or gets married, it’s hard for you to be happy – you just can’t be happy no matter what.  Before, you would have joined in the congratulatory offerings and been genuinely pleased for the person.

You watch the clock too.  You were likely a person who was never a clock watcher but now you are – you can’t wait until 5 o’clock comes around so everyone leaves and you’re alone.

Alone becomes more and more appealing because you somehow think you’ll get something done.  But you’ll find that an hour has passed and nothing has been accomplished – you go into a blank world in your mind – you can’t move.

Clutter – one sure sign of burn out is clutter.  The clutter increases or your appearance deteriorates because of your perception that you don’t have enough time to get everything done.  You’re likely not sleeping much either so that doesn’t help – you look like it!

Work - you look at your work and it’s odd.  Some of the things you say or how you phrase things is so out to lunch that you can’t even recognize it as work you have produced sometimes.  You’ll have moments of brilliance mixed totally off the wall content.  Sometimes you’ll say things just don’t make any sense and you know it.  Everyone around you knows there is something wrong but most of them can’t identify it – you’re acting strange and that’s all they know.

You don’t have breaks – you don’t eat lunch unless someone drags you out and brings you something to eat -

Depression - is very close at hand – a deep, deep depression – you can feel that too.  The disconnect with everyone and everything and the perception there is not time for anything or anyone is a sign it has crept in.  The lack of caring and being hyper at the same time is a clue.

So what do you do about it? 

The first step is to go to your doctor and get some help.  Your doctor will likely tell you the road back to your normal self will be slow but there is no doubt you’ll recover.  Your doctor will likely give you a letter recommending a medical leave from work.  Take it.  Don’t even hesitate.  Take it.  It’s the best beginning to recovery you can get and get some counseling from a professional who specializes in recovery from burnout.  Even if you can’t get stress leave, take vacation time or a leave of absence.  You need to get away from work for a little while.

Exercise - start an exercise program immediately and exercise as much as you can every single day – weights, cardio, yoga - and go outside as much as you can every single day – surround yourself with nature -

Eat good food – preferably organic – your body has taken quite a beating through this process and it needs nourishment.  Take vitamins too – every day.  It’s critical that you get some good vitamins and take them.

Journal – talk to yourself in a journal about what you feel, don’t feel, etc.  Anything.  Every day sometimes several times a day.  It’s important to get it out.

Read good books both fictional and non-fictional.  Non-fictional – read about learning to handle stress better and start adopting some techniques which suit you.  Fictional will bring your mind into a world of fantasy where you can get lost for a little while.

Massages – start getting some massages.  They help release the tension and the toxins that build up in your body.  It doesn’t have to be expensive – you can go to a nearby school where they teach massage.  In some cases, your health insurance will pay for it.

Talk to your family.  Let them know what’s happening and what you need from them.  Sometimes it’s just a matter of letting them know you’d love their support but you’ll likely be spending a lot of time by yourself in the next while.

Understand what stresses you the most and what you can do to help you control your stress.  That’s very important so you never get to this point again.

Time – learn to schedule appropriatelyAt first, don’t put time limits on activities.  For instance, say you want to exercise every day at 10 am – don’t put a limit on it – just leave it wide open so you have no pressure to finish.  Soon, you’ll get a rhythm going and you’ll be able to access how long you like to exercise for. 

Get into the habit of slowly introducing regular times to do things such as having lunch – you probably skipped breakfast, lunch and dinner in your most acute burn out stage.  So set times and make the experience pleasant each time – food you like – not too much – create a ritual such as placing your knife, fork and napkin on a placemat before starting to prepare your meal and sit with music to have your meals.  Keep regular hours to eat each meal.  Make it a very pleasant event which you cherish. 

Organize your space a little at a time.  For 15 minutes, 1/2 hour or an hour a day, declutter your world.  It’s very therapeutic.

And only you can know what else you’ll have to do – every life is different – every person is differentbut the key is to give yourself the time to heal.  That’s your first most important step whether it takes a week, three weeks or several months – you need the timedon’t kid yourself either – you know you’ve burned out – you know it deeply.  But there is a tendency to deny it and keep on no matter what – it’s the worst thing to do.  Take time to get better and get some better time and life management skills so you never experience burn out again.  Yes, I’m talking from experience – been there, done that – and yes, I got over it successfully.  If you want some coaching, I’m available and my fees are low because I simply don’t want to add more stress to your life with huge fees that you cannot afford at this point.  Contact me through my blog here:  www.wizetime.com.  You’ll see I have a contact form.

Now – do one thing – only one thing – go get better!

EXTROVERTS – GIVE YOURSELF A BREAK!

A client said to me in an email recently that it was difficult for her to get back to tasks after an enjoyable telephone conversation.  Knowing her extroverted personality, I wasn’t surprised. 

Extroverts are energized by talking to people – they like to laugh, talk and just love to be around people.  Isolation is a real motivation killer for an extrovert.

Being an entrepreneur of a one-person company, of course, there will be a lot of time necessary spent alone doing proposals, reports, billing and a host of other tasks associated with a small business.

My advice to her:  after a great telephone conversation, take a break.  Make yourself a cup of tea, relax for 15-20 minutes, and then get back to work.  Even a short walk around the block will help.  It’s a way for an extrovert to “come down” from the high s/he gets from interacting with people.

So, if you’re an extrovert – try it – I know it works – it’s the only way because if you force yourself to get back to tasks right away, you’ll be hyper, uninterested in what you are doing and, maybe, even feel as though you’ll blow up if you sit and work.  The energy either has to be dissipated or used up before you can get back to the type of activity that is really not your preference.