Stress  Management Information

Stress And Anxiety - Take Charge Of It!


Have you ever noticed what occurs when you are suddenly thrown into a high tension situation?

Does any of this sound familiar?

* Raised pulse

* Short faster breaths

* Shallower breathing

* Feelings of losing control

* Limbs twitching and/or shaking

* Feeling hot and clammy

OK, there may be more, but I think they are a good start.

If you answered no to all of them then, CONGRATULATIONS, you don't suffer from stress (or any human emotion) at all!

Seriously though, such feelings are often the reason why people suffer from stress and anxiety in their everyday lives and, this is the point,

EVEN WHEN THEY ARE NOT IN STRESSFUL SITUATIONS!

The stress they feel regularly in pressure environments does not leave them and this leads to extended periods of tension, headaches, poor and shallow breathing, and oftenleads them to indulge in vices that exacerbate the problem.

Unfortunately this is the nature of society and, short of retiring to a mountain top for a life of solitude, it cannot easily change.

Not everyone can simply leave their jobs for example, it is not always that simple.

Alright then, what CAN be done?

Essentially, we need to spend some time re-training our responses to stressful and anxious situations. In a nutshell we need to develop AWARENESS of how we feel and which situations require a different response.

Obviously, this takes time.

Here are some practical steps to help alleviate stress related problems.

1. Practice becoming AWARE of when you need to applydifferent physical and mental responses. Meetings,interviews, and suchlike are obvious examples. Howabout while driving, many people are unnecessarilytense and stressed, and because it is such a commonthing to do, we are not even aware we ARE overtlystressed while doing it!

2. Re-train yourself to breathe differently in hard tohandle situations. Inhale deeply through your nosewhen anxious as opposed to reverting to shallow,fast, and erratic breathing. Now the important part.Allow the exhale to be LONGER. This will aid inpreventing hyperventilation and will bring with ita feeling of calm control.

3. Check your body for muscular tension. Mentally scandown your body and feel for undue tension. If you dofeel it, address it, and combine attempts at relaxingthe relevant body part with your exhalation. Literallybreathe out your mental AND physical stress and tenseness.Let it go!

Remember, you can learn to use such methods under everyday stress just like you can learn (and apply) anything. While many people resort to vices that really just make matters worse, deep breathing and all that it entails allows a person to go within oneself at any given moment and find a healthier solution to the problem of anxiety and stress.

(c) Tim Webb 2005 All Rights Reserved

Tim Webb is a fitness instructor, Ju Jutsu instructor and competitor. He specialises in easily accessible deep breathing exercises that combine breath and mind together. His site http://www.BreathForSuccess.com offers a product that provides deep breathing exercises for invigorating yourself, stress and anxiety reduction, and highlights how your breath can be tied in with your goals to move you towards them in record time!


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