January, 2007
The No More Stress Monthly is a newsletter that provides featured articles on depression prevention, proper anxiety treatment techniques, reviews of natural depression treatments, interviews with psychologists, and information on both adult depression and teen depression, stress, and anxiety. The No More Stress Monthly is brought to you by Stress-Anxiety-Depression.org.
Stress affects our bodies both physically and mentally. It can lead to the development of health problems such as headaches, upset stomach, rashes, insomnia, ulcers, high blood pressure, heart disease, and stroke, as well as depression, and other mental health conditions. Anxiety, or excess fear and worrying, can lead to stress and vice versa. The remedy for both of these conditions involves learning new and better ways to handle stressful or anxiety producing situations before they become a problem.
Your
ability to cope with stressful and anxiety inducing situations will
determine the toll they take on your life. And contrary to popular
belief, your coping skills are not genetic, they're learned. Just
because your mother was a worrier, doesn't mean that you have to be one
too. It just means that your mother never learned good coping skills,
and she passed along her unhealthy skills to you. But you can break the
cycle by recognizing your unhealthy coping techniques and learning
other ways to handle the stress and anxiety in your life.
Scientists
have studied the effectiveness of different methods for dealing with
stressful and anxious situations. Research has shown that those with
the best response to stress and anxiety know how to take
responsibility, take action, seek advice and support, express their
feelings, stay confident, and learn from their mistakes. In contrast,
those with the poorest responses to stress become hostile and
aggressive, self-blaming and blaming of others, indecisive, they ignore
their problems, bottle their emotions, give up, and overindulge in
food, drink, cigarettes, or other substances.
People
who are regularly overwhelmed by stress and anxiety tend to display a
variety of signs and symptoms. Check the following list to see if any
of these behaviors sound familiar.
If
stress and anxiety are becoming overwhelming factors in your life, it's
time to learn some new techniques for managing the situations that are
causing you problems.
Identify Your Triggers
What is the
source of your stress or anxiety? If you need to, sit down and make a
list of the things, situations, or people that have become distressing
to you. What's your reaction to the stress and anxiety they generate in
your life? How does it make you feel physically? Emotionally?
Take
a look at your list and determine where you can make changes to
eliminate or reduce stress and anxiety. Can you avoid the stressor? Or
somehow shorten your exposure? If not, then you may need to learn new
techniques to manage your reactions to it.
If
you are trying to cope with a stressful or anxiety producing situation,
the best thing you can do is to take care of yourself physically. Eat
well-balanced and nutritious meals to ensure that your body is getting
the vitamins and nutrients it needs to stay healthy. And make exercise
a priority. Exercise is a great way to relieve stress, divert your
thoughts, and keep your body healthy. Avoid using nicotine, excessive
caffeine, and other stimulants, as these can aggravate the symptoms of
stress and anxiety.
Practice relaxation
techniques such as deep breathing, progressive relaxation, yoga,
tai-chi, or massage to reduce stress and relieve tension. If you work
on these techniques everyday, you will be better prepared to handle
stressful and anxiety producing situations as they arise.
Stay
connected with friends and family. Your social network can help you
through rough times by offering emotional support and possibly even
helping to alleviate some of your daily tasks and responsibilities. If
necessary, seek the advice of a professional counselor or mental health
specialist to help you learn how to identify the source of your stress
and anxiety and better ways to cope with it.
Helping
others can be an extremely gratifying way to reduce stress and divert
your thoughts from your own problems. It's also a good way to maintain
and strengthen your support network and to help you put your own
problems into perspective.
There are some
things that you just cannot change. As difficult as it may seem,
learning to let go is one of the best ways for reducing stress and
anxiety in your life.