Posts Tagged ‘stress reduction’:


Turn Off the Stress

The Cave Woman Returns Home

Most heart experts consider the major risk factors of heart disease as age, heredity, obesity, smoking, inactivity, poor diet and high blood pressure. However, stress appears to pose a significant risk in some people. You have heard of the fight or flight response to a perceived threat to your safety, whereby chemicals such as cortisol and adrenaline are increased in the body until the threat has passed. When the cave woman is running from the saber tooth tiger, she needs the alertness and speed that the chemicals provide. When she returns to the safety and warmth of her cave, she can relax and allow her bodily functions to return to a normal level.

Modern day women, however, often maintain a high stress level on a continuous basis as their return to the cave or home is met with the demands of running children to sports practice, helping with homework, preparing dinner, listening to their spouse’s work problems, and returning telephone calls and e-mails. When is the time to relax? How do you relax and alleviate stress? Even though we know stress can affect our attitude and cause us to overeat or drink, we need to be mindful that we are not helpless in this situation. Physical activity, yoga, meditation, quiet time, and close friends can assist us in relieving stress.

Our bodily systems are wonderfully connected and function according to set patterns. One example dealing with stress is the action of the “super gland”, the hypothalamus, which allows for the increase of adrenaline, norepinephrine, and cortisol which adds more sugar to the blood and raises the heart rate in times of stress. If the stress level remains high, these chemicals can inhibit the production of estrogen, effecting bone growth and calcium reserves and drawing calcium away from the bones.

Rest and exercise act to reduce stress levels and among other benefits promote muscle and bone growth. Weight bearing exercises such as walking, resistance training and even yoga, which directs safe pressure to all your bones and joints, adds strength and flexibility for healthy living. Our cave woman doesn’t have to go to a gym to exercise as she is already walking, running, lifting, and reaching. She is both hunter and farmer. Without electricity there is no TV, computer or artificial lighting. When darkness comes she rests, and eats when hungry or when food is available, retaining fat for periods of famine and extreme cold. Our bodies today are regulated under the same functional systems as the cave woman. However we are probably not going to die of starvation, but we might from stress overload. Give yourself vital relaxation time and periodically step off life’s treadmill and enjoy your cave.

Article by Bob McDowell, Certified Personal Trainer.

Laugh and the Whole World Laughs With You

I don’t recall when I first heard that line or the following one of “cry and you’ll cry alone.” I think it means that laughter and happiness attracts people, and continued sadness often sends them away. In Proverbs 15:13 and 15:15 we read “a glad heart lights up the face, but by mental anguish the spirit is broken” and “every day is miserable for the depressed, but a lighthearted man has a continual feast.”

We all have problems of one kind or another but we do have a choice as to how we live with these difficulties. It is the old story of two people observing a ½ filled glass. One

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say it is ½ empty and the other says it is ½ filled. What type of person are we? Laughter or having a sense of humor doesn’t make our daily problems disappear but it sure does make life a lot more bearable and enjoyable. I once knew a janitor who sang while he worked and I asked him why he seemed so happy. He said that he never asked what was wrong with his life only what was right, and when he counted his blessings, he sang with joy.

As you observe children playing, notice how they sing and laugh their way through card and board games and enjoy breaking rules of pick-up sports games. Being around kids will make you laugh. Watch the antics of your pet dog or cat and laugh with them. Keep a list of funny movies, jokes, and articles and refer to them when you need a lift of spirits. Laughing causes physical benefits to our bodies including the exchange of large amounts of fresh air, deeper breathing, hundreds of facial muscles get a workout and tear ducts drain. Stress levels are reduced and abdominal muscles engaged.

Laughter can elevate the spirits of those around you. In our cost conscious world, laughter remains free of charge and never runs short of supply. Use it as much as you like and reap the benefits of a good hearty laugh!

Article by Bob McDowell, Certified Personal Trainer.

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