Simple Ways To Prevent Stress

Stress is often lurking in the background when an illness strikes. Maybe you have caught the flu that has been floating around work and you notice that you always seem to catch the latest thing that is doing the rounds, be it the flu at work or the cold at your daughter's kindergarten. It could well be that you are stressed out and this has affected your immune system and made you more susceptible to these types of complaints. And while it is easy to take cough drops or an honey-n-lemon drink for the cold it is not quite so obvious how to treat stress.

The secret to treating stress is that prevention is better than cure. Staying on top of stress is the best solution to beating stress. The good news is that techniques for preventing stress are easy to learn.

Stress

Here are some simple ways to prevent stress :

Simple Ways To Prevent Stress

Don't take on too much - remain realistic about what you can do. Don't be afraid to turn things down because you think you may miss out on a promotion.

Have some down time - allow yourself to switch off from everyday reality. Take on a hobby. Do some exercise. Play a game of squash. Go out for a meal and a movie. Have some fun, life is not always serious.

Treat yourself - if you have had a hard day, why not run a hot bath and spend a few hours soaking your weary body and reading a trashy novel

Keep in touch with friends - your true friends will look out for you. They will know when you are down and how to pick you up. Often talking to your friends is the reality check you need when stress is making you depressed.

Laugh - see something funny or see the funny side in something. Having a sense of humor will never allow stress to make you take things too seriously.

For people that are chronically stressed out take up meditation or yoga. These types of activities can help you to change how your body responds to stress and can help you to relax more completely.

Where people fail in combating stress is that they are not disciplined enough to follow through with common stress management techniques because they are lazy, get in a rut or don't believe the techniques work.

Or, worse still, they don't listen to their body when it is telling them that they are getting stressed out and never try to reduce stress. They don't listen, out of some sort of pride, or they justify enduring stress because they have a duty to provide for their family. Whilst this is an understandable reaction, in the long run they will be worse off and so will their family. Listen to the warnings your body gives you.

Simple Ways To Prevent Stress

Get more informed about the how stress affects health or find out if you may have any common symptoms of stress by visiting http://www.stressmanagementreview.com

Adrian Whittle writes on issues related to stress including how stress affects the immune system and dealing with stress for older people and retirees.

Stress, High Blood Sugar Levels and Belly Fat!

People who have type 2 diabetes should approach stress as an enemy to be eliminated. Why? Because in addition to the normal array of stressors, type 2 diabetes adds more stress. It takes a lot of emotional energy to simply handle normal daily events such as: your job, your family, your finances and, let's face it... getting older.

Add to that a medical condition like type 2 diabetes, now you you dealing with additional stresses like:

Stress

  • high blood sugar levels
  • obesity
  • working out a healthy eating plan
  • fitting in physical exercise
  • if and when to take medications

How do those stress feelings affect your health? Your mental health does affect your type 2 diabetes, here's how:

Stress, High Blood Sugar Levels and Belly Fat!

  • stress increases the secretion of insulin and the stress hormone, cortisol. These hormones promote the formation of belly fat
  • when stressed you often delay or skip meals... you guessed it... then processed or fast foods are eaten
  • when you feel stressed you will not sleep well. Your cortisol level is triggered, as is your risk of developing belly fat. When you are tired during the day, it is not unusual to drink coffee or energy drinks to help pick you up... unfortunately the caffeine then increases your stress level, and you will not sleep well again. It can keep going around in circles

Hints to help or prevent stress:

1. Shrug if off... a quick stretch can help you shrug off stress, especially if you find it builds up in your body.

2. Soak stress away ... it is amazing how a warm bath can help get rid of more than just dirt.

3. Let it go ... you cannot change the past, yesterday is gone. Tomorrow is not here yet. The old cliche that today is the first day of the rest of your life is so true... that is all you can deal with, the here and now.

4. Get organized... daily chaos of missed appointments, and the can't-find-it syndrome are easy to fix. Use an organizer and make lists; don't cramp your style.

5. Identify your goals... work out what you need to do to achieve them... then get started.

Your body responds to physical and mental stress by raising your blood sugar levels. When it does, don't worry about a one-time high reading or a reading that is slightly different to your normal blood sugar range. Enlist friends to help you... ones that will help you not ones that will add to your stress.

Stress, High Blood Sugar Levels and Belly Fat!

Are you looking for effective ways to manage your type 2 diabetes?

To download your free copy of my E-Book, click here now: Answers to Your Questions... its based on questions many diabetics have asked me over recent months.

Beverleigh Piepers is a registered nurse who would like to help you understand how to live easily and happily with your type 2 diabetes.

http://drugfreetype2diabetes.com/blog

Stress - Social Issues

A day at the end of which you fall weary and try to collect your powers as the next morning to start again. Even if you do not intend to give up this pace of life that is not encouraging at all, have you ever thought that your body can fall?

Modern society gives us many advantages, but also it gives us so many sources of stress, which sooner or later they will show negative effects.

Stress

Stressors are very variable. May be of a psychic (professional or family complaints, fatigue, etc..) Socio-cultural or physical (pain, infectious states, etc.).. We will give details of psychological stressors: occupational stress and fatigue.

Stress - Social Issues

Occupational stress is the second in the hierarchy of professional health issues in the EU. Studies show that occupational stress affects over 40 million employees from EU countries According to a large number of studies, occupational stress affects about one-third (28%) of employees of the fifteen EU Member States. Women reach higher levels, but for both women and men, stress can be a problem in all sectors and at all levels of an organization. One of the most common cause is lack of control over work. 35% of employees say they have no word to say about their tasks and 55% complain that they have no influence on labor duration. Monotonous work, tight deadlines (29% of staff said that are working in these conditions), inappropriate treatment at work are other factors that cause occupational stress. Stress is a complex emotional reactions, cognitive, behavioral and psychological aspects. Positive stress (healthy) stimulates and causes employees to meet the demands of work, the negative stress (excessive) can not be controlled and can cause adverse health effects. Stress affects the health of the organism causing the emergence of diseases such as: ischemic cardiomyopathy, mental disorders (anxiety, depression, suicide), muscalo disorders, gastrointestinal disorders.

Fatigue and drowsiness are the result of perpetuation wakefulness during periods biologically programmed for sleep, the insomnia extended and systematic reduction of hours of sleep. It is undeniable that such situations lead to lower levels of human performance. Even moderate reduction of sleep duration for short periods of time (about two hours a night over a week) accumulate and manifest itself through an irresistible tendency to fall asleep during inappropriate situations.

And do not forget! If daily stress can not be mastered by the several methods presented above, do not hesitate to consult your doctor.

Stress - Social Issues

Avinash Bikumalla

Author and founder of Shovel Garden and Online Gardening Tools

Stress, High Blood Sugar Levels and Belly Fat!

People who have type 2 diabetes should approach stress as an enemy to be eliminated. Why? Because in addition to the normal array of stressors, type 2 diabetes adds more stress. It takes a lot of emotional energy to simply handle normal daily events such as: your job, your family, your finances and, let's face it... getting older.

Add to that a medical condition like type 2 diabetes, now you you dealing with additional stresses like:

Stress

  • high blood sugar levels
  • obesity
  • working out a healthy eating plan
  • fitting in physical exercise
  • if and when to take medications

How do those stress feelings affect your health? Your mental health does affect your type 2 diabetes, here's how:

Stress, High Blood Sugar Levels and Belly Fat!

  • stress increases the secretion of insulin and the stress hormone, cortisol. These hormones promote the formation of belly fat
  • when stressed you often delay or skip meals... you guessed it... then processed or fast foods are eaten
  • when you feel stressed you will not sleep well. Your cortisol level is triggered, as is your risk of developing belly fat. When you are tired during the day, it is not unusual to drink coffee or energy drinks to help pick you up... unfortunately the caffeine then increases your stress level, and you will not sleep well again. It can keep going around in circles

Hints to help or prevent stress:

1. Shrug if off... a quick stretch can help you shrug off stress, especially if you find it builds up in your body.

2. Soak stress away ... it is amazing how a warm bath can help get rid of more than just dirt.

3. Let it go ... you cannot change the past, yesterday is gone. Tomorrow is not here yet. The old cliche that today is the first day of the rest of your life is so true... that is all you can deal with, the here and now.

4. Get organized... daily chaos of missed appointments, and the can't-find-it syndrome are easy to fix. Use an organizer and make lists; don't cramp your style.

5. Identify your goals... work out what you need to do to achieve them... then get started.

Your body responds to physical and mental stress by raising your blood sugar levels. When it does, don't worry about a one-time high reading or a reading that is slightly different to your normal blood sugar range. Enlist friends to help you... ones that will help you not ones that will add to your stress.

Stress, High Blood Sugar Levels and Belly Fat!

Are you looking for effective ways to manage your type 2 diabetes?

To download your free copy of my E-Book, click here now: Answers to Your Questions... its based on questions many diabetics have asked me over recent months.

Beverleigh Piepers is a registered nurse who would like to help you understand how to live easily and happily with your type 2 diabetes.

http://drugfreetype2diabetes.com/blog

Stress: Daily Self-Care Habits to Manage Stress

Today we have more stress in our lives than ever before - good stress, bad stress, red stress, blue stress (my little ode to Dr. Seuss). No matter what kind of stress it is, a real crisis or an imagined one, stress is incredibly harmful to our body, mind and soul.

Here are my favourite self-care habits for dealing with stress:

Stress

1. Get in the habit of noticing.

Stress: Daily Self-Care Habits to Manage Stress

Take an inventory of all the things that just don't feel right in your life or that you know are causing you stress. For example, when you approach certain people, places or situations do you feel more stress and tension? Once you have your list in place, look at what you can change yourself, and do it. You can also use this list to predict stressful situations before they occur.

2. Get in the habit of asking for help.

For what you can't change yourself, you need a team. Build a team of experts to handle your list. A coach, at the top of the list, will help with the big picture and will keep you honest about your efforts. Other team members might be a family doctor who listens to you, a financial planner, a massage therapist and an exercise partner.

3. Get in the habit of bouncing back.

Think of Plan A as your basic self-care plan while stress is under control. Now imagine something happens and you are under stress. Instead of abandoning all self-care because you can't do it all, have a Plan B ready beforehand.

4. Get in the habit of relaxing.

If you practice relaxation techniques (breathing, meditation, imagery, music) every day, then when stressful situations come up you'll have the tools at your fingertips.

5. Get in the habit of gratitude.

Our attitude comes from our emotions and our emotions come from our thoughts. Thinking about what we're grateful for and what we're good at can keep things positive. It's not about shying away from what's challenging you - it's about approaching life from a place of strength and not as a victim.

6. Get in the habit of creating.

Experiment with a new recipe in the kitchen, write a poem, bang a drum, do a craft, take a dance class or do something else that feels creative to you.

7. Get in the habit of putting your stuff away.

Physical clutter can really impact on mental, emotional and physical health. Get rid of things that don't make you happy when you look at them. Organize your stuff. Find a place for everything and keep it there.

8. Get in the habit of breathing.

This is the simplest and quickest way to relax yourself in a stressful situation. The minute you focus on your breathing it automatically gets slower and deeper.

9. Get in the habit of daydreaming.

Take yourself away on an imaginary holiday. Just close your eyes and go! Picture somewhere you've been or somewhere you've dreamed of.

10. Get in the habit of giggling.

Laugh out loud every day.

Don't let your stress get the better of you! Which one of these strategies can you apply this week to manage your stress?

Copyright 2005, Genuine Coaching Services. All rights reserved.

Stress: Daily Self-Care Habits to Manage Stress

Linda Dessau, MTA, CPCC, is a self-care expert, accredited music therapist and certified life coach. Learn more about using singing for stress management, personal growth and spiritual development at http://www.singoutyourstress.com, where you can download the FREE report, "Top 10 Ways to Sing Out Your Stress".

Stress - The Number One Risk Factor

"If stress is half as bad for you as we currently think it is, it's time to stop treating the side effects. It's time to go after stress itself."

--Robert Sapolsky, Stress Researcher

Stress

Stress is all around us. That's a simple fact. Our bodies and brains are hardwired to deal with it. However, the wiring was done when we lived in caves and had to worry about "lions, and tigers, and bears...oh my!" The systems which still exist within our cells are incapable of discriminating between a hungry lion, an angry boss, an irate driver, a displeasured spouse, and an IRS tax auditor.

Stress - The Number One Risk Factor

Also, where the cave person of yesteryear could at least retreat to a cave for some solace from the immediate, and very real, threats which were a part of daily life, our "threats" tend to follow us home. Where Alley Oop used vast amounts of physical activity to ameliorate the potentially destructive outcomes of a physical and mental reaction to daily dangers, we pop open a beer to wash down our high fat, fast-food meal, and go to sleep in a bed a cave person would probably find way too soft, but only get a fraction of the quality sleep we need.

Like it or not, stress plays a huge role in modern life, and modern life does not normally provide the outlets and conditions conducive to easing its burden.

Stress is not fun. It does not feel good. Even if there were nothing more to say about it, chronic stress would be something we would be happy to avoid. However, more than simply being a nuisance, chronic stress has been linked to many very serious health conditions, including, but not limited to, lower back pain, heart disease, cancer, high blood pressure, Alzheimer's, and even the common cold.

It is slightly paradoxical that, despite the sentiment in the opening quote, treating the symptoms of stress can actually go a long way towards not only reducing its risks, but can also be a step in reducing stress itself!

Stress reduction is incredibly important to health, well-being, quality of life, and the length of life itself. We devour article after article, watch documentary after documentary, all of which inform us that eating properly, and getting enough exercise are crucial to good health - now and in our later years - which will be longer and more enjoyable if we exercise and eat properly.

We don't even bat an eye when we are reminded that heredity will still be a major factor in the ultimate outcomes of our lives, speaking from a health point of view. After all, we can override a lot of genetic negatives with a positive lifestyle.

However, research is showing that chronic stress can trump not only the benefits of exercise and proper nutrition, but those of heredity itself. Genetics and lifestyle choices are not powerless against the effects of stress, but, like a laser weapon, choices must be made which directly and indirectly reduce the stress before the full benefits of positive lifestyle choices can be received.

Fortunately, despite the prevalence of stressors in our society, and in ourselves, there are positive steps which even the most negative of us can take to reduce the impact of chronic stress on our bodies and minds...and on our futures.

Exercise: While "working out" has great possibilities in helping reduce stress, forcing yourself to work out if you simply do not want to, will only increase the levels of stress you are already experiencing. Even so, acknowledging the need for some activity to help release tension and finding some pleasant and enjoyable activity will do you a world of good...if you want to.

Face Reality: Much stress comes from not really knowing what it is we are facing. Sometimes looking the beast in the face helps you reduce it to a manageable size. At the worst, facing your enemy seldom makes the stress worse and can make it lessen in intensity. An old trick I learned long ago is to imagine the absolute worst thing that could happen. Live it in your mind, feel it in your body, and then imagine what you would do if your worst fears actually came to pass. I find that this usually immediately produces feelings, not of ease and relaxation, but of stress reduction as the problem itself becomes more manageable simply by being directly addressed.

Widen Your Social Links: Friends and family help us stay grounded and give us a sense of support. Studies show that people with broad networks of friends tend to have less stress.

Avoid Confrontations: Daily life can offer plenty of chances for confrontation as it is. These situations can increase stress levels if we let them. There is a multiplier effect if we allow ourselves to be sucked into the situations and participate in the confrontation. Pick your battles. There are some definitely worth fighting, but most are not. If another driver cuts you off, allow yourself a moment or two of righteous indignation and then shrug it off. It's not worth ruining your health over. Feel sorry for the other driver who has to live with himself or herself.

Cut Out Unhealthy Habits Such as Alcohol, Drugs, and Cigarettes: While these can give a momentary burst of pseudo-relaxation, in the long run they can raise blood pressure, cause you to act in ways that increase stress, and just plain give you more to worry about.

Be Good to Yourself: No matter what is happening in your life, you are a good person...if you choose to be. Find the good and live with that. Downsize if necessary. Start over again. Do it better the next time. Learn from your mistakes. Be prepared to forgive yourself, especially if you make some of the same mistakes again. You need somebody on your side, and the best person to have there is you. Dump the negative self talk.

Relax: Easier said then done. However, there are simple meditation techniques that can help you "go away to a happy place" for a few minutes each day. Done regularly, they can actually not only ease some of the symptoms of stress, but can reduce stress itself.

Stress - The Number One Risk Factor

Donovan Baldwin is a 65-year-old amateur bodybuilder, freelance writer, certified optician, and Internet marketer currently living in the Atlanta, Gerogia area. A University Of West Florida alumnus (1973) with a BA in accounting, he has been a member of Mensa and has been a Program Accountant for the Florida State Department of Education, the Business Manager of a community mental health center, and a multi-county Fiscal Consultant for an educational field office. He has also been a trainer for a major international corporation, and has managed various small businesses, including his own. After retiring from the U. S. Army in 1995, with 21 years of service, he became interested in Internet marketing and developed various online businesses. He has been writing poetry, articles, and essays for over 40 years, and now frequently publishes original articles on his own websites and for use by other webmasters. You can find more information about stress at http://nodiet4me.com/stress/.

How to Recognize Stress Before it Turns Into Anger

After a stressful day as a computer programmer, Jim pulled into his driveway. The children's toys were scattered on the walkway to the house.

He immediately began noticing slight tension in his muscles and apprehension in his stomach. Entering his house, his wife ignored him while she talked with her sister on the telephone. His heart started beating a little faster.

Stress

Looking around, he noticed disarray; nothing was picked up, the house was a mess. Irritation and frustration started to settle in. Finally, as his feelings grew, he exploded and began yelling at his wife and children.

How to Recognize Stress Before it Turns Into Anger

Stress may trigger anger:

Stress is often the trigger that takes us from feeling peaceful to experiencing uncomfortable angry feelings in many common situations such as the one described above.

Stress is most easily defined as a series of bodily responses to demands made upon us called stressors.

These "demands" or stressors can be negative (such as coping with a driver who cuts in front of you on the freeway) or positive (such as keeping on a tour schedule while on vacation).

Stressors may be external to you (like work pressure) or internal (like expectations you have of yourself or feeling guilty about something you did or want to do).

Whether the stressor is external or internal, scientists have discovered that the major systems of the body work together to provide one of the human organism's most powerful and sophisticated defenses; the stress response which you may know better as "fight-or-flight."

This response helps you to cope with stressors in your life. To do so, it activates and coordinates the brain, glands, hormones, immune system, heart, blood and lungs.

Avoid Jim's destructive behavior toward his loved ones. Before your stress response turns into anger or aggression, use these strategies to get it under control:

Read your personal warning lights: Becoming aware of your stress response is the first step to managing it. This means listening to your body, being aware of your negative emotions, and observing your own behavior when under stress.

For instance, notice muscle tension, pounding heart, raising voice, irritation, dry mouth, or erratic movements.

What you see is what you get: For a potential stressor to affect us -stress us out - we have to first perceive it or experience it as a stressor.

Gaining a new perspective on the stressing situation can often drastically change the effect it has on us. Our stress response can indeed be a response (something we can control) instead of a knee-jerk reaction (which is automatic).

Examples: Cut off on the freeway? "It is not personal. That guy has a problem. I will stay calm." Bullied by a co-worker? "If I react, he wins. Later, I will privately let him know how I feel about what he did. If that doesn't work, I'll discuss it with our manager."

Stress-Guard your life: You can also make many life-style changes to reduce or minimize feeling stressed-out, even if you can't change some of your actual stressors

For instance, manage your time better, establish priorities, protect yourself from toxic relationships, and find a way to manage your money better, or consider changing your job or occupation.

Other stress-guards include those you have probably heard before, but maybe need to do more frequently such as:

getting adequate rest,
eating a healthy diet,
avoiding excessive alcohol intake,
living in a way consistent with your core personal values,
developing social networks of friends and support.

Stress is most easily defined as a series of bodily responses to demands made upon us called stressors. It's important to recognize these stress responses and develop techniques to lessen the impact.

How to Recognize Stress Before it Turns Into Anger

Dr. Tony Fiore is a So. California licensed psychologist, and anger management trainer. His company, The Anger Coach, provides anger and stress management programs, training and products to individuals, couples, and the workplace. Sign up for his free monthly newsletter "Taming The Anger Bee" at www.angercoach.com and receive two bonus reports.

Stress: Common Causes and Treatment Options

We've all felt stress at many points in our lives. For many it is dismissed as simply a part of our existence, but when it becomes too much it can help to aggravate feelings of anxiety and diminish our well being. When that happens, the stress that a person is feeling needs to be dealt with effectively, either through home remedies, or possibly with the help of professional care. In either case, the first step is to recognize some of the common causes of stress. That way, if treatment becomes necessary, you can more easily chose the correct one.

Causes of Stress

Stress

Unfortunately the specific causes of stress can vary widely from person to person and situation to situation. For example, some medications, or recreational drugs have side effects that include anxiety. Other causes of stress include a demanding workload, underlying health problems, and even relationships. Whatever the causes, they certainly need to be addressed for any treatment option to work effectively.

Stress: Common Causes and Treatment Options

Perhaps the most effective first step in discovering the causes of your stress and anxiety is to take a personal inventory. Start by sitting down and taking a deep breath. Then ask yourself a series of questions, and be prepared to give honest and complete answers.

  • What is constantly on your mind?
  • What worries you the most right now?
  • Does something in particular make you sad or have feelings of depression?
  • How is your workload? Has it become too much?

Ask yourself these questions, and also try to keep a diary or a journal of thoughts or actions that seem to be associated with your anxiety or increase in stress levels. While these exercises may seem pointless at the time, soon, you'll begin to see a pattern. Soon you'll be able to link the triggers of your increased stress with various thoughts, actions or situations. By knowing the root causes of your stress and anxiety, you'll be able to better treat them.

Treatment Options

Perhaps one of the easiest ways to help alleviate stress is to talk with someone. Often have a good conversation with a friend or a loved one is all that is needed to relieve anxiety and help put your world into perspective.

In addition, there are a number of different ways to cope with the stress you experience in your life. For starters, take a look at your diet. Eating a well-balanced diet can help to maintain your blood pressure, reduce your cholesterol, and help to alleviate feelings of indigestion, which is a common symptom of too much stress. Also, consider trying to get more rest. In today's world, very few of us get the sleep that we need on a regular basis. The normal adult needs somewhere between seven and ten hours of sleep a night to function well. How much are you getting? Also, try to eliminate or at least limit your consumption of alcohol, nicotine, or other recreational drugs. Often these substances will cause more harm than good, especially if you are under a high stress situation.

Finally, consider learning how to meditate or perform relaxing breathing exercises. You would be surprised how much you'll relax once you start to meditate on a regular basis.

When to Call the Doctor

Of course, there might be situations where all these home methods are simply not as effective as you wish them to be. Sometimes in order to deal with the underlying causes of stress, you might need to call in professional health. There is absolutely no shame in doing so; millions of people a year ask for help with wonderful results. The stigma of asking for help in regards to your mental and physical health is lifting rapidly, and with good reason.

Often, making the choice to talk to your doctor isn't so much about the symptoms of stress, but rather how they are affecting your life. If your levels of stress and anxiety have become so overwhelming that you can no longer function at the same level you were before, a call to your doctor is in order. Another reason to call your health professional is when you cannot pinpoint the cause or source of your feelings, or if you have a sudden, uncontrollable feeling of panic. Together the two of you should be able to plan a method of dealing with your stress and anxiety. Be sure to discuss any medications you are already taking, including over the counter ones. There are a number of anti-anxiety medications that will often interact with other medicines - so knowing what's in your medicine chest is extremely important.

Once you are at your doctor's office, you can expect a review of your medical history, a physical examination, as well as a detailed conversation with your doctor concerning your life in general, as well as the symptoms that you are experiencing. This is done not to waste time, but rather so that other medical causes for your symptoms can be ruled out. Once this is accomplished, your doctor will determine if you do need to see a mental health professional and can often offer a recommendation.

The causes of stress and anxiety can certainly vary from person to person, and treatment options can very just as widely. Finding the most effective ways to treat your stress and anxiety can be a long process, and often a combination of different ideas will work the best.

Stress: Common Causes and Treatment Options

Are you overworked and pulled in every direction? Let me help you get on track. Join my inner circle and get your FREE Achieving Balance Workbook at http://beyondburnout.com. You also get a subscription to my Sanity Saver Newsletter.

Stress and Student Success - 7 Key Sources of Stress For College Students

Many new students are quite surprised to discover just how stressful college life can be. The brochures all picture happy young people leisurely chatting in small groups, sitting under trees with open books, and enjoying thoughtful conversations with their professors. Oh, and having fun. But behind all this, there's a lot of pressure, which can cause a lot of stress.

In recent studies of college students around the country, researchers have identified several key sources of stress. While many of the conclusions in these studies were no surprise, the researchers also discovered several new sources of stress. Whether you're a student, a teacher, a friend, or family member of a student, you'll find it helpful to know and understand the things that cause the most stress.

Stress

1. Time Management

Stress and Student Success - 7 Key Sources of Stress For College Students

Problems with time management are among the biggest stressors among students. Many newcomers to college don't have the skills it takes to schedule their time in a way that allows them to fulfill all their obligations. Some of them spend too little time with their studies, while others are distracted by personal problems or other issues that take up their time and interfere with their studies.

2. Setting Priorities

One of the reasons for the time management problems is that many students find it challenging to balance their many obligations. Setting appropriate priorities is something that can take time to learn. Many students have a hard time balancing what they want to do with what they need to do, often leaving little time for academic pursuits. Many of the students in the studies commented that they felt as if they were always "on the run" and couldn't settle into any one thing comfortably.

3. Financial Stability

Worrying about money and financial stability was another key source of stress for many students. The cost of attending college is constantly increasing, which is especially burdensome to students without homes and families to support them financially. Most students found it very difficult to handle all of these obligations without feeling at least a little bit of stress.

4. Family Expectations

A great deal of stress comes from family expectations. Many students are simply attending school to please their parents, while others study subjects their parents don't approve of. Either of these situations - as well as other family-related stress - can add to the burden of coping with a heavy schedule and other pressures.

5. Personal relationships

Intimate relationships, while adding joy to life, can also add stress. It's often challenging to maintain a high academic average while also nurturing a serious relationship - or trying to find one. On the other hand, having a supportive significant other who appreciates all the hard work can actually lower stress.

6. Campus Crime

While not directly related to academia, crime on campus, whether real or hypothetical, can also add to student stress. Many students fear for their belongings as well as for their lives in unsafe neighborhoods and campuses. Living in a place that doesn't feel safe can make focusing on academic work very challenging.

7. Future Uncertainty

Uncertainty about the future also adds a great deal of stress to students' lives. Changing career prospects and shifts in personal interests make many students question their choice of majors. Coupled with potentially high student loan payments after graduation, this can add quite a bit of pressure to an already stressful student experience.

Stress and Student Success - 7 Key Sources of Stress For College Students

And if you recognize yourself or the student in your life in this article and wonder what to do about it, you are invited to get your FREE ebook with seven mood-boosting and stress-reducing strategies at http://www.myfavoriteselfhelpstuff.com/freebie/FBQFreebie1.html

If you want Elisabeth Kuhn's full-sized version instead, with lots more strategies, you can get it at http://www.InstantStressReliefStrategies.com

Stress - Types, Causes and Treatment

Stress is an unavoidable aspect of everyday life. Every person suffers from one form of stress or another at some point in their lives. The word "stress" is often associated with bad feelings, depression and fatigue. What many are not aware of is that there are good forms of stress, as well as bad. Stress can make one more productive, or it can cause sleeplessness, irritability and anxiety.

Eustress is the kind of stress felt before a big event, after winning a trophy, or in anticipation of a big promotion. This type of stress never lasts long, but the effects of this type of stress are positive rather than negative. Eustress gives us strength when we need it most. Most people do not regard that anxious anticipation as a form of "stress", but that is exactly what it is. Eustress is a positive stress. It gives us strength, motivation and inspiration.

Stress

The most common form of stress is called acute stress. In moderation, this form of stress can be exciting. Many people feel this type of stress before an important event. However, too much of this stress can be exhausting. This stress is brought on by the pressure of everyday life, be it a report to do in a short time, or an exciting event just past. Too much of this type of stress can cause very discomforting symptoms, such as tension headaches, nausea, anxiety, irritability and depression. Most people can recognize these symptoms of stress by just taking the time to look at how hectic their life has been lately. This type of stress is easily manageable and usually results in no serious long-term affects.

Stress - Types, Causes and Treatment

Chronic stress is possibly the most dangerous type of stress, along with post-traumatic stress disorder. Chronic stress is also a common illness and is often crippling to the mind and body. Unlike acute stress, chronic stress is long lasting. This type of stress can continue affecting lives for weeks, months, even years. People suffering from chronic stress think negatively about almost everything. They often believe that disaster waits around every corner. Nothing good ever lasts very long and there seems to be no end in sight for the bad. Individuals suffering from chronic stress often lose hope and stop trying to find a solution for their problem.

Individuals suffering from chronic stress often learn to live with it. They get used to feeling horrible all the time. Chronic stress becomes almost comfortable and sometimes unnoticeable. Chronic stress, if not properly treated, can become fatal. Health risks caused from chronic stress include heart attack, stroke and maybe even cancer. Some people suffering from chronic stress resort to taking their own lives. Often, in order for the symptoms of chronic stress to be controlled, medical treatment is needed, as well as psychiatric treatment.

Sometimes stress can be decreased by making simple changes in our everyday lives. Other times, extensive psychotherapy is necessary to treat the symptoms. Set back some "alone time" to unwind. Read a book, listen to music, or just take some deep, soothing breaths every day. Many people have found that setting aside time for themselves has increased the overall quality of life. Try to get seven to nine hours of sleep each night to allow your body to recuperate after a busy day. Eat a healthy, balanced diet and be sure to get enough exercise. This will give you more energy and help heighten your mood. If you feel that changing your lifestyle will not suffice and that you need more help, talk to a health professional.

Stress - Types, Causes and Treatment

Michael Russell Your Independent guide to Stress

Stress Causes Of Shingles

Shingles (herpes zoster) can only occur in people that have previously had Chickenpox. Chickenpox is never completed eradicated from the body and lies dormant. It can be reactivated at any time by a number of causes, one of which could be excessive stress. The result is normally a localised rash which could be painful or itchy. Other things that may cause shingles are being run down, old age or weakened immune systems.

Stress can cause shingles because chronic stress will affect the immune system. Normally, during a stressful event the body will change the way the immune system will work. This is done by passing adrenaline and cortisol through the bloodstream. In terms of the immune system this will increase the consistency of the blood to make it thicker or sticky. This is in case of injuries that require clotting to seal the injury. This will increase the amount of plasma in the blood. Should the body become injured it will have to fight off potential bacteria and disease. The immune system responds by producing more white blood cells which fight against foreign bodies that may harm the body.

Stress

This is fine for sudden stress but if the stress is prolonged and becomes chronic then the immune system is constantly on high alert. This will mean the blood will be thicker than normal which can have further health complications. There will be too many white blood cells in the bloodstream than is needed. An over stimulated immune system has two consequences for the body. It works too well and starts to attack parts of the body or bacteria that live in the body that work in synergy with the body to attack disease. Or, it becomes so conditioned to working at a heightened level that it does not respond to mild diseases or ailments that enter the body. This is why people that are under stress often complain about catching colds easily. This generally leads to a feeling of being run-down and tired.

Stress Causes Of Shingles

In the case of shingles, it is believed that the immune system is weakened and the body is run-down. This contributes to the reactivating of the chicken pox virus, as the body cannot suppress the virus. This leads to rashes occurring on the body that can be painful or itchy. The rashes can last for days weeks or months. In some cases they can last for years. For temporary relief you can apply a soothing agent like aloe vera, for example. If the rash persists it is advisable to consult your doctor.

Stress Causes Of Shingles

Stress can cause outbreaks of shingles and many other illnesses. To find out how stress affects health and how to develop a stress management program visit http://stressmanagementreview.com Adrian Whittle writes on many stress related issues including common symptoms of stress and ways to relieve stress.

Stress - How It Affects the Body

The effect stress can have on the body can be enormous with a lot of people today ending up paying a high price for stress levels that are too high for too long a period of time. An important note here is that the body is either in a state of "fight or flight" or a state of "growth and repair", it cannot be in both states at the same time. In other words when the body is experiencing stress that is at too high a level, it is flooded with cortisol and adrenaline and cannot focus on healing and repairing the body. When this goes on for too long you increase the risk of suffering a stress induced disease as the load on your immune system becomes too great.

When the stress response is activated, you'll find that your heart rate increases, your pupils dilate, you breathe faster, and you may break out in a sweat. Do you recognise this process? In our ancestors days most threats were of a physical nature such as the potential threat of a wild animal so you either ran away or fought the animal off. This physical response of fighting or fleeing meant the adrenaline that flooded the body could be burned off. What tends to happen today too often though is the "threat" is not usually of a physical nature rather it is work related stress, relationship stress, or financial stress, so this coupled with a more sedentary lifestyle adds up to chronic health damaging stress. The trouble with this all to frequent scenario though is its insidious nature, because it goes on every day it is often perceived as normal.

Stress

There is plenty of evidence to show the connection between mind and body. What can be overlooked with physical issues is that its cause could be mental or emotional in origin, in other words from a stressful event or series of events. For example, you may have developed migraine headaches that seem to be occurring more frequently. The connection you may not have made however is that shortly before the migraine headaches began you may have increased your hours at work, and your youngest child had just started school. The connection you may have overlooked is these increased stressors in relation to the development of your migraine headaches.

Stress - How It Affects the Body

This is where the beauty and simplicity of EFT Tapping comes in. EFT Tapping has been used by thousands of people on a range of physical and emotional issues with great success and it is just as easily resolved if the event occurred yesterday, five years, or fifty years ago. When the effects of stress become too great, EFT Tapping can easily be used to help reduce your stress levels down to a more manageable level.

Stress - How It Affects the Body

Heather Todd is an EFT practitioner, business owner, and author. To download your FREE EFT manual and for help and support with fears, phobias, anxiety, stress, anger, trauma, or grief see our website for further info http://www.achieveemotionalfreedom.com.

Stress - How Perceived Stress Vs Actual Stress Affects Your Health

Stress affects your health in a variety of ways, all negative. Without going into all the biochemical specifics, suffice it to say stress, perceived or actual, floods your body with powerful stress-related chemicals that would be very useful if you were literally fighting or running for your life, and are very health-destructive otherwise.

Effects Of Stress On The Body

Stress

  • Stress cause blood platelets to stick together, which raises blood pressure.
  • Stress causes your body to burn essential nutrients at a rapid rate, which can lead to nutrient deficiency leading to poor organ and gland function.
  • Stress interrupts digestion, which means food goes partially undigested and you get only a fraction of the nutrients from the food you would get otherwise.
  • Stress floods your system with homocystine and cortisol, which are linked to high blood pressure, heart disease and a tendency to gain weight.

Types Of Stress: Actual And Perceived

Stress - How Perceived Stress Vs Actual Stress Affects Your Health

Actual stress, which is largely unavoidable, includes environmental stress such as air, water and noise pollution, and other environmental factors including extreme temperature, dangerous weather and so on.

Actual stress, which is fully avoidable, includes things like smoking, excessive drinking, a junk-food, fast-food, high-sugar, nutritionally deficient diet, lack of sleep, pushing yourself physically beyond your limits, and doing anything that obviously works against your health and well being.

Sources of psychological stress, most of which is avoidable or certainly capable of being modified, may include things like relationship issues with a spouse, child or anyone;  job-related issues; financial issues; self-esteem issues; goal and achievement related issues, personal integrity issues and so on.

When something happens that directly, physically impacts you, it is an ACTUAL stress.  Drinking polluted water, dropping a hammer on your foot, eating a bag of cookies and washing it down with a quart of sweet tea; these are sources of actual, real stress.

Perceived stress is not actual, perceived stress has to do with the story you tell yourself about what something means.  If your spouse runs late without calling, and you get all upset because you decide that means he or she is having an affair, then you upset yourself abut something that may or may not ever happen, and being upset about the thing you IMAGINE produces the SAME negative cascade of powerful stress-chemicals that flood your system as if an actual physical stress had occurred. 

Perceived Stress May Be More Health-Destructive Than Actual Stress

If you think about something that has not happened, and your thoughts upset you, the stress response to those imagined events is a REAL STRESSOR that affects your health.  This is how someone can use their mind to destroy their health, and while the stress is imagined, the damage is real.

A study published in The Journal of Psychosomatic Medicine reports that perceived stress is more destructive to your immune system response than actual stress.

Using blood samples taken over a 16-month period from study participants who had been vaccinated against meningitis C, researchers determined that people with high levels of PERCEIVED STRESS consistently measured fewer protective antibodies than all other groups.

Participants were divided into 3 groups;

1) Group one had Low ACTUAL Stress with no stress conditions beyond the ordinary. 2) Group two had High ACTUAL Stress with unusually high stressful circumstances. 3) Group three had High PERCEIVED Stress.  Most participants in group three had low to normal stress levels, however, they perceived their lives as being highly stressful.

The group with high-perceived stress frequently had very low actual stress.

The group with HIGH PERCEIVED STRESS tested 80% fewer protective antibodies in their blood than either of the other two groups.

Discussion: The message here is clear; there is a DIRECT and MEASURABLE connection between your immune system strength and the way your react to the world around you.

The most notable thing about this study is the clear distinction made between ACTUAL STRESS and PERCEIVED STRESS.

Several of the study participants experienced the loss of a parent during the 16-month study period.  By any standard, the death of a loved one is a highly stressful event, yet even those in this highest stress group had perfectly normal levels of protective antibodies.

Twenty seven percent of the participants reported high levels of perceived stress during the study and, to a person, this 27% had up to 80% fewer antibodies, even though in most cases, their ACTUAL stress was far less than other participants.

The message is clear.  If you think you are stressed you get the negative health consequences whether or not the stress is real.

How does perceived stress weaken your immune system?

When you feel stressed your brain produces a cascade of powerful bio-chemicals called neurotransmitters.  There are many different kinds of neurotransmitters, but the long and short of it is that stress related neurotransmitters can be HIGHLY DESTRUCTIVE to your health.

Constantly feeling stressed means you are constantly flooding your body with powerful chemicals that weaken your immune system and leave you more vulnerable to illness and disease.

Practical Application: The practical application of this information is obvious.  Take control of your emotions and never let little things, (or big things), get you down.

Stressful situations occur, but ACTUAL STRESS, stress that you recognize, deal with and move on, will not harm your health.

Monitor your feelings and emotions.  If something is bothering you, DEAL WITH IT.   Your health is too important to let things bother you for very long, and besides that, (to quote my dad), what difference will it make in a hundred years?  And to quote my wife, what difference will it make in an hour?

Remember this . . .

Stress-related bio-chemicals damage your health and those chemicals are made IN DIRECT RESPONSE TO YOUR PERCEPTIONS, not in response to the actual situation, and that means, simply controlling your response to things may go a long way to helping protect and preserve your health.

Remember, excellent health is a choice you can make, and you make that choice every day with your diet, nutrition and lifestyle decisions.  So learn everything you can... and choose wisely.

Stress - How Perceived Stress Vs Actual Stress Affects Your Health

Russell J. Martino, Ph.D. will get you excited about getting into excellent health. Dr. Martino believes there is no such thing as health-care in America, only sick-care. His mission is to radically redefine the way individuals look at their own health by providing information that empowers you to leave average health behind and become actively, vibrantly healthy.

Dr. Martino, who has been interviewed hundreds of times on radio and television, is a highly regarded expert in weight loss, diet, nutrition and health. He has formulated nutritional products, at one time owned a nutritional supplement company and he designed the diet, nutrition and psychological protocols for one of the most exclusive weight loss spas in the US.

Through his 5 Steps To Optimal Health Program, recently released in book form, Russell Martino has helped thousands lose weight and keep it off, and become healthier and more energetic. He is author of 5 Steps to Optimal Health, The Politically Incorrect Health Talk Audio Program and editor of http://www.VoiceOfHealth.com and http://www.SuccessAtTheSpeedOfLife.com

Stress - Why Do Some People Feel More Stress Than Others?

Stress seems to be a subjective experience. The same stimulus that causes an array of physical symptoms in one person fails to bother a different person in any way.

For example, for me even the thought of riding a roller coaster, especially one that runs upside-down or backwards, makes my heart jump.  I think if I went on such a ride I would get so stressed so fast it would cause a heart attack.

Stress

Yet millions of people love to ride roller coasters. They enjoy that adrenalin rush. What they experience as exhilaration I experience as intense fear and super high stress.

Stress - Why Do Some People Feel More Stress Than Others?

What makes that difference? Why do some people live every moment in crisis or high drama constantly in stressful situations - or so they perceive them that way.

Therein lies the answer. Stress results from interpreting life events in ways that feel bad, negative, sad, angry, etc.

Stressed people see the glass as half empty. Their focus always goes to the worst possible scenario regardless of the situation.

You always see what you look for - always. When you look for the bad you will find it. Ah, and when you look for the good you will find the good!

People actually become addicted to their emotional state. Witness how people who live in drama and stress behave while on vacation. For them their stress level often increases when they don't have to go to work. They find themselves anxious about what may be happening back at the office - or not happening that needs to get done. They worry about how much work is piling up for them to tend to after their vacation.

Those people attract bad things because all they feel is worry and fear. People always and only attract who they are and how they feel. Then they seem surprised their lives continue to look and feel crummy.

They only expect bad things and sure enough - they get only bad things.

Their stress levels would actually rise even higher if they failed to get their worry-fix. And, as with any addiction, they need each fix to be more and more potent as their body acclimates to the current levels of bodily chemicals released by their emotions.

On the other side of the coin are the people who either hide their heads in the sand and pretend nothing bad, and therefore nothing stress inducing, exists. Hiding is less than optimal. Eventually untended-to emotions increase in severity until they explode n your face manifesting as illness or injury.

Where is the happy middle? Right in the middle. People who look for the good in life find it. They live at higher frequencies of vibration where all that is happy and good exists. When you look for the good and focus on solutions you simply do not experience stress too often.

People can only feel stressed if they feel unable to act to change the situation. When they know they create their reality they know they create it as they want to live it.

Stress - Why Do Some People Feel More Stress Than Others?

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Stress - The American Status Symbol

Stress - the popular name for the new American status symbol. Everyday conversation is peppered with references to lack of time to accomplish goals, the frustration of poor communication and a general sense that no matter how fast we go, we will not get it all done and no one understands. Defining the word in one sentence is difficult for it is actually the unification of multiple human responses to life into a single concept that nearly everyone experiences. There are very few people who do not know what stress feels like.

The use of the word has become a catch phrase for all of the pressures we experience in life. Sometimes that can be confusing. Is stress the cause of the pressures or the effect of those pressures? In other words, is stress the stimulus or the response? Most people, physicians and lay alike, feel that stress is a response to pressure or mounting demands. These stimuli can be external or internal further complicating the event especially when the internal feeling is caused by an external event.

Stress

As medicine has traveled the path of psychoneuroimmunology (the study of the immune system as it relates to the nervous system and the mind), we have become aware that stress compromises our immunity. It stimulates the perpetual release of the hormones adrenaline, noradrenaline and cortisol which tear through the body like a firestorm. If not controlled, chronic stress, together with the anger and depression it perpetuates, leads to illness and even death.

Stress - The American Status Symbol

Research at the Institute of HeartMath in Boulder Creek, CA has concluded that the amount of stress we feel is based more on our perception of an event or a person than on the actual event itself. Our ability to respond to disastrous events or changes in our life is directly related to our perception of what occurred. It is the daily accumulation of little stressors, much like the termites that finally eat their way through the foundation of the house, that take the major toll on our health. We must learn how to neutralize our reactions as they occur or risk compounding the stressful interactions within our bodies' systems, draining our health. How much daily stress we live with determines how much resilience we will have when a major crisis occurs.

Clinically, stress can be analyzed on three levels - psychological, physiological and social. Each person combines these states of being in different ways and it is this combination that creates the individual options for handling stressful circumstances. We have built into our psychological and physiological makeup the power to affect a point of balance between our resources of coping with stress internally and the daily stress that we encounter. By consciously exercising this ability, we can control our perception of life's events and the degree of stress that we might experience. The first step in beginning this process is learning to recognize what causes the stress initially. Then, we can develop a general way of dealing with pressures, changes and the issues of life.

Often, simply knowing that it is possible to have some sense of control over a situation can lead to a dramatic reduction in the stress level experienced. By becoming conscious of the options inherent in a stressful situation and by being aware of the effectiveness of our responses to these situations, we may be able to exert more control over what we experience and thereby influence our own stress level.

To handle stress effectively, we must understand what we are going through. We must cultivate an ability to perceive the entire experience, not only the piece that is personal. In this way we can begin to understand the relationship of the whole and receive feedback that we would have otherwise missed. This allows us to see our life situation more clearly and directly influence the level of stress we habitually create. It is helpful that we keep in mind that it is our perception of situations and how we react to them that determines our stress level. If we are able to change our perception, we are able to change our response.

Stress - The American Status Symbol

Toni Elizabeth Sar'h Petrinovich, Ph.D. is a visionary, weaver of grace, quantum physicist and multidimensional traveler. Born with memory of the etheric worlds intact, Toni uses her gifts to expand the same re-membrance within the consciousness of other beings. She is the owner of Sacred Spaces in the beautiful San Juan Islands off the coast of Washington State where she conducts personal sessions, retreats and etheric readings for all those drawn to the authentic Self. She is the author of The Call - Awakening the Angelic Human and its accompanying CD, DNA Re-Awakening. Toni is also a direct channel for the Light Orbs who are the Guardians of the Soul. She does long distance healing, spiritual counseling, soul readings, light orb readings and chakra readings by appointment.

For more information regarding Toni's work or to contact her by telephone or email, please see her websites: http://www.sacredspaceswa.com and http://www.angelichuman.com

Stress - Understanding Its Effects on the Elderly

Stress is a normal part of everyday life. While young people are more resilient in dealing with the negative impact of stress, senior citizens can have a tougher time negotiating the physical effects stress can have on the body. In some ways, stress in small doses can be beneficiary in the sense that it serves to motivate us. But as we get older and our bodies become more sensitive to our environment, doing all we can to eliminate stress from our daily life becomes more important. Incidences of heart disease, infection, and depression become much more prevalent as we age and it's widely known that the psychological effects of stress play a direct role in the strength of the body's immune system. There are many activities and programs of which seniors can take advantage of that are directly designed to alleviate stress. Some of these programs can be found in local recreational or senior citizen assisted living facilities.

Let's take a moment to review some of the possible symptoms that stress can bring on:

Stress

Chest pain can no doubt be one of the most alarming symptoms. This is because it can mislead you to think you are having a heart attack. Regardless of whether you think this is true or not, immediate medical attention should be sought out if chest pain persists for any elongated period of time.

Stress - Understanding Its Effects on the Elderly

Shortness of breath can be another disturbing symptom. One effective way to deal with this sensation is to remind yourself that your lungs are actually getting enough air, and to simply sit down and control your breathing in a slower and relaxed pace.

Dryness of the mouth is another common symptom but probably the least threatening. Keeping regularly hydrated and with pure and healthy liquid sources is a quick and easy solution.

A persistent weakness in the legs and arms can also be result of stress. This is most likely due to the fact that stress can cause changes in blood oxygen and muscle tension. Light exercise is another quick and easy fix, not to mention the additional attributes that go along with physical activity. Visiting the gym on a regular basis in your local fitness center or senior facility, is a great way to stay ahead of the curve should this symptom be an issue.

Having a better understanding of how these symptoms affect your body will be the first step in taking back control of your life from stress. Read reviews on Dre Beats!

Stress - Understanding Its Effects on the Elderly

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Stress - Impact on the Mind and Body

Stress leads to physical and or mental tension. If stress becomes unrelenting and chronic it is a major factor in causing disease. The stress reaction involves the whole body. Organs and systems are constantly on the alert and physically prepared to respond to the stressor - even when you are sitting behind a desk or making a presentation or working too hard for too long or dealing with too many stimulating projects at the one time or dealing with too many demands on your time.

Stress can adversely affect the mind and body in many ways.

Stress

  • Alcohol, tobacco and other substance abuse: problems dealing with stress can lead to an increase in the consumption of substances such as alcohol, tranquillisers, sleeping pills, other drugs, smoking and caffeine consumption.

  • Chronic tiredness/fatigue: with the right levels of stress we are able to be productive, creative, enthusiastic and healthy, However when we have too much stress we become less efficient and productive and start to develop poor interpersonal relationships. Together these factors can lead to mental and physical fatigue which can lead to more stress and this often ends in 'burn-out'.

  • Depression: high cortisol levels and serotonin-noradrenalin dysfunction - both common to chronic stress are implicated in depression. Stress can exacerbate all psychiatric conditions including depression.

  • Diabetes and insulin resistance: adrenaline released during the stress reaction inhibits the production of insulin - a major hormone that is responsible for moving insulin from the blood. When we have chronic stress sustained high blood sugar levels together with high levels of cortisol (a hormone) and a susceptible individual we have the potential for developing diabetes. Stress also makes existing diabetes worse.

  • Digestion: diarrhoea, oesophageal spasms; irritable bowel syndrome; poor digestion with bloating, gas and abdominal pain; spastic colon, ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease are some of the digestive system problems that are associated with stress.

  • Heart or cardiovascular system: heart attacks, high blood pressure, thickening of the arteries (atherosclerosis or plaque formation), thrombosis (formation of blood clots) and strokes.

  • Immune system: in the short term stress enhances the immune function but sustained stress suppressed its function. The more stress there is the fewer antibodies the body will produce. Both kinds of immunity (cell mediated and humoral immunity) are affected by chronic stress - this means that you are more likely to be infected by viruses (including those linked to cancer), bacteria, fungi and parasites. There will also be an increase in sensitivity to environmental toxins. The link between stress and the immune system is seen in disorders ranging from colds to autoimmune conditions (such as multiple sclerosis, systemic lupus erythematosis, rheumatoid arthritis, ulcerative colitis) and HIV/AIDs through to cancers.

  • Insomnia: difficulty sleeping is one of the first symptoms of high levels of stress. We need sufficient sleep in order to function properly and to be able to manage the day to day stressors of living in a modern world.

  • Obesity: cortisol (a hormone) is secreted during long term stress which leads to fat accumulating around the abdomen and back. Stress can also lead to behaviour patterns whereby we try to be kind or nice to ourselves and eat what we think of as 'comfort foods'. These foods are usually high in fats and sugars.

  • Sexual and reproductive system: impotence, premature ejaculation, lowered libido, frigidity, loss of self confidence, premenstrual tension and infertility. Stress also play a major role in the experience of life transitions - puberty, menopause (male and female) retirement and old age.

  • Skeletal system: backaches, headaches (due to tension and poor posture), muscle tension. Stress hormones interfere with the body's ability to produce bone - resulting in low bone density and osteoporosis.

  • Skin: approximately 40% of skin disorders as associated with stress. Dermatitis and eczema are often directly related to stress reactions. Problems such as psoriasis, urticaria, acne and cold sores are made worse by or brought on by stress.

  • Other problems associated with stress include: forgetfulness, persistent irritability, apathy, lack of concentration, social withdrawal and increased aggression.
It can be seen from the list above that the effects of chronic stress can be debilitating and widespread. If the conditions above are treated without due attention being paid to the stressor underlying the condition then improvements will, at best, only be partial. Relaxation and visualisation, exercise, balanced diet, vitamin and mineral supplementation and herbal remedies are just some of the approaches that can be of benefit. (You can find these on the healthproductssite.com)

Stress - Impact on the Mind and Body
Stress - Impact on the Mind and Body

Dr Jenny Tylee is an experienced health professional who is passionate about health and wellbeing. She believes that health is not just absence of disease and seeks to actively promote vitality and wellness through empowering others. She encourages people to improve their health by quit smoking, cleansing their body, taking essential vitamin and mineral supplement and many other methods, including herbal remedies.

Stress - The Link Between Stress And Money

I suspect there are very few people who haven't been stressed over money at some point in their life. Indeed, for many people, money is probably their greatest cause of stress and they worry about how they're going to pay the mortgage or meet the next car payment.

Surprisingly enough money even causes stress for people who have a lot of it and, in some cases, their stress levels are even higher than those in the majority. They don't of course need to worry about their next mortgage payment, but they often have substantial sums of money invested and watch their fortunes rise and fall with the world markets.

Stress

Perhaps the strangest thing of all is that there's no real reason why money should be the cause of such stress. Certainly in the past people had a lot less money than most of us do today and they managed to lead very happy lives with next to nothing in the bank, so why is it such a problem for so many people today?

Stress - The Link Between Stress And Money

This is not all that easy a question to answer, but a sense of perspective will probably help.

The fact of the matter is that stress over money is no more or less likely that stress over anything else in our lives and, more often than not, when we talk about stress in relation to money we don't really mean stress at all. Perhaps a better word would be 'concern'.

Stress arises when a person finds themselves in the position of having a problem which they feel that they 'must' solve but for which they 'can't' find a solution. You might for example come out of a meeting with a boss that you simply don't get on with feeling stressed. In this case stress results from the fact that you're locked into working for this individual with seemingly irreconcilable differences and simply can't see a way out, other than to quit your job which isn't an option because you need the money.

In most cases of stress over money however the problem is temporary and, while the solution may not always be attractive, there is generally an answer and you can see a light at the end of the tunnel.

Millions of people find themselves in debt every year, particularly in an age of credit cards, interest free credit and a host of other 'easy money' alternatives. But, just as millions of people get into debt, so millions of people also get out of debt.

One of the most common causes of stress over money arises out of family arguments over money and when two people disagree over how to spend limited funds, conflict is the almost inevitable result. But, there is no need for this form of conflict to lead to stress. If both parties are willing to be realistic, to plan together for the long-term planning, to respect the other person's point of view and to compromise when necessary, a solution can almost always be found.

Stress - The Link Between Stress And Money

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Why Stress Causes Obesity?

Obesity today is so common that young people are also suffering from this kind of disease. Normally, obesity is diagnosed during middle age. However today, you will normally hear that young people in their 20's are now suffering from this kind of disease.

The main cause of obesity is overeating. However, not many people know the causes of overeating. And, the answer to this question is stress. Many people today, especially young people, are now living a hectic and stressful lifestyle. Because they live this kind of life, they tend to eat comfort foods to get rid of stress.

Stress

Stress can make you feel hungry even though you just ate. Because of this reason, you will tend to eat more portions and fast food chains are serving food portions that are high in fat, sugar and salt 700 percent larger than what is recommended by dietitians and nutritionists.

Why Stress Causes Obesity?

Over the past two decades, stress has increased in an alarming rate. Studies also found that along with the increase of stress, obesity also followed closely. Try and ask yourself about being stressed. After eating a hearty breakfast, you set off for work. On your way to work, you experience being stuck in a traffic jam. You will see that it will stress you out and it will also make you hungry an crave for food even though you just ate a big breakfast just less than an hour ago.

As you can see, stress is a large contributor to obesity. Because of this, it is very important for you to live a stress free lifestyle as much as you can. You can consider exercising as it can reduce stress or you can also try to meditate.

There is so much you have to change in your life today in order to avoid experiencing stress and at the same time, avoid gaining weight until you become obese. Through exercise and by eating only when you need to, you will decrease stress plus it can also decrease your risk on becoming obese.

Remember this and you will live a happier and healthier life. Defeat obesity by first defeating stress.

Why Stress Causes Obesity?

To learn how you can defeat stress with these ways to deal with stress, visit my stress reducing tips site

Stress Relief Food to Help Lower Stress Levels

Foods play a vital role in providing mental and physical nourishment for relieving stress. For stressed people, the foods that you need to avoid are the ones that contain a great amount of caffeine and alcohol. Sugar should also be avoided because it causes the blood sugar to soar and then drop very quickly.

To get rid of stress, there are different kinds of stress relief foods that you can try for your mental and physical wellness. Below are several types of stress relief food to help you manage stress:

Stress

1. Asparagus - This green vegetable is high in folic acid that helps stabilize your mood. The body releases hormones that affect the mood when stressed and eating asparagus is a good way to block these hormones. Folic acid is actually needed by the body to make serotonin, it is a chemical naturally produced in the body that affects mood in a positive way.

2. Beef - Beef is also a good stress relief food even though it is usually not considered when talking about health but beef contains good amount of zinc, iron, and B vitamins that also helps in stabilizing the mood. People always think that beef is not good for the body but it is actually more nutritious than chicken. The secret to making a nutritious meal with beef is to not include the fat because it is high in cholesterol.

3. Milk - Milk is very nutritious and high in antioxidants. It is also rich in vitamins B1, B12, calcium and protein that can make you feel relaxed. You can have a bowl of cereal and milk for breakfast to battle the stress ahead of you. Drinking a warm glass of milk also help induce sleep.

4. Cottage Cheese and Fruit - Cottage cheese is a stress relief food that is rich in both protein and calcium. Mixing cottage cheese and fruits high on vitamin C like oranges is a good combination to help fight stress. Vitamin C contains antioxidants that fight free radicals that are released when you are stressed. Furthermore, these free radicals are known to cause cancer.

5. Blueberries - Blueberries are high-fiber, low-calorie fruits that contains vitamin C antioxidants good for combating stress. You can mix blueberries with cottage cheese or you can also eat them alone for a healthy snack.

6. Tuna - Tuna is also a great stress relief food option because of its stress-fighting vitamins. Tunas are rich in vitamins B6 and B12 and it is also a good source of protein. If you love mayonnaise, it is advisable to use a low-fat mayonnaise for a healthy meal.
To know more about other kinds of stress relief food, it is best that you consult a

Stress Relief Food to Help Lower Stress Levels

Milos Pesic is an expert in the field of Stress, Depression and Anxiety management and runs a highly popular and comprehensive Stress Management web site. For more articles and resources on stress relief, stress tests, stress symptoms, stress reduction, anxiety and depression treatments and much more visit his site at:

=>http://stress.need-to-know.net/

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Ease Upper Back Pain During Pregnancy

While lower back pain is by far the most common for pregnant women, other areas of the back may experience it as well. Upper back pain during pregnancy normally occurs during the third trimester, at which point the body has undergone the most extreme changes it can in preparation for childbirth. Fortunately, there are things you can do to ease upper back pain, and make the last weeks of your pregnancy as easy and pleasant as possible. After all, you want to be able to focus all of your energy on the baby that is nearly here, and don't want to be distracted with unnecessary pain.

Upper back pain during pregnancy occurs late in the pregnancy because as the uterus expands to its maximum size, it places pressure on your ribs, especially on the right side. Your uterus will stretch up as well as outward, so you may find it harder to breathe as pressure is put on your diaphragm. You may find you have pain in your shoulders, because pressure is being put on nerves in the diaphragm which go up into the shoulders. These pains can be quite sharp, and may sometimes be accompanied by heartburn because of pressure being put on the stomach.

Strain

Many women's breasts also enlarge substantially during pregnancy, and the extra weight can pull your shoulders down, creating strain on your neck, the top of your back and ribs. In addition, your body will be undergoing some major hormonal changes as the body prepares for delivery, so muscles and ligaments are relaxed and loosened. Your ribcage will expand as part of this process, so your lungs can take in extra air. Even though you may sometimes find it hard to breathe, you are actually taking in about 40 percent more oxygen than you did before your pregnancy. This is all meant to prepare you for the rigors of childbirth.

One thing you can do to ease upper level back pain is to buy a more supportive bra. Look for a good nursing bra without underwires. The better your breasts are supported, the less likely they are to cause strain on your neck and upper back. Try to wear comfortable loose clothing so you can breathe and move freely.

When experiencing back pain during pregnancy, you can alleviate some of it by practicing some stretches. Start by holding your arms over your head to take pressure up and away from your ribs. Do chest stretches in the doorway. These are especially good for your shoulders by rotating them up and back, and lifting the ribs away from the uterus.

You can also ease upper back pain by practicing prenatal yoga, and generally focusing on stretches that pull your ribs away from the uterus. A visit to a massage therapist or chiropractor might also be beneficial.

Upper back pain during pregnancy is a reality for many women, but if you practice good posture and the correct stretches, you should feel much better. If you ease upper back pain, your last weeks of pregnancy should go very smoothly.

Ease Upper Back Pain During Pregnancy

You can find helpful information about upper back pain during pregnancy and everything you need to know about ease upper back pain at Aha! Baby.

See Also : What to do to lose weight

7 Tips to Relieve Stress At Work

Do you feel stress at work? Do you carry your stress home with you at night?

Here are some tips that will help you achieve success over stress. You can reduce stress on the job.

Stress

1. When making phone calls, as you pick up the phone and dial, take three slow deep breaths. Concentrate on pushing tension out of your lungs as you exhale.

2. Sit down to eat. (Do not eat while standing or driving in your car) Focus on relaxing and enjoyable talk at lunchtime. If co-workers only insist on rehashing all of the negative stuff at work, insist on eating alone.

3. When you drive your car to your business or your job, listen to something enjoyable or motivating.

4. On the way home from your business or your job, listen to enjoyable or relaxing music.

5. Take a few minutes each day to thank God, in whatever form is consistent with your belief system, for the glorious sunrise. At sunset, do the same. If you are at work while the sun is setting, take a quick break to watch the sun set and again, thank your concept of "God" for the glorious sunset.

6. Take a few minutes at work to think of people who may have harmed you in any way. Breathe deeply, relax, and push out all of the tension surrounding those thoughts. Fill your hear and your lungs with forgiveness for the person or persons who have harmed you. Wish for them the same success and happiness you wish for yourself.

7. Live today as if it where your last day. Make your last day, your best day!

Summary:

Use the seven tips to relieve stress at work and enjoy your job and your life.

7 Tips to Relieve Stress At Work

Wayne F. Perkins, Stress Annihilator and author of "How to Achieve All of Your Goals All of the Time" Phone: 602-647-4280 FAX: 928-637-0008 Stress Annihilation Website

http://www.stressannihilation.com

"Annihilate Stress and Propagate Hope."

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Eat For Stress Relief - 5 Foods to Calm You Down

If you're jittery bundle of nerves, start eating for stress relief. The following five foods will calm you down and make you feel fit enough to handle whatever life can throw at you.

1. Avocados Lower Your Blood Pressure

\"stress Management\"

Stress is a great excuse to indulge in creamy guacamole. Not only will you get instant stress relief from this green marvel, you'll also do your heart good. Avocado contains both monounsaturated fat, and potassium, which can lower your blood pressure.

2. Oats, Your Serotonin Enhancer

Just like your mother told you, porridge is good for you. Oats contain carbohydrates which are absorbed slowly, and this enhances the serotonin-producing abilities of your brain. Serotonin is your body's own stress-relieving chemical.

So if you know you'll have a busy, high-pressure day, take a few moments to eat a bowl of porridge or muesli before you leave the house.

3. Oranges - Fast Stress Relief

Oranges for stress relief, who knew? It turns out that vitamin C relieves stress by returning your blood pressure and levels of cortisol (a chemical produced by the body when you're under stress) to normal quickly.

4. Salmon Keeps Cortisol and Adrenaline in Check

Salmon is packed with omega-3 fatty acids, and they keep cortisol and adrenaline (another chemical your body produces when you're under stress) in check.

If you hate fish, you can buy capsules of omega-3, but fresh salmon is better for you.

5. Skim Milk, Calms You and Relieves PMS

Do you turn into a fire-breathing dragon at that time of the month? Skim milk not only calms you down at any time, but it's especially useful when you're suffering the irritability and mood swings of PMS.

Here's an added tip: if your stress is giving you insomnia, a glass of skim milk will help sooth you to sleep.

Everyone suffers from stress. The above five foods will not only help you to manage stress, but will also improve your general health, so that you're calm and serene, even in the midst of the chaos of your life.

Eat For Stress Relief - 5 Foods to Calm You Down

Want more stress relief tips? You'll get more information on stress management on the Just Stress Relief Blog at http://www.juststressrelief.com/blog/, and at the Easy Fab Yoga Blog at http://www.easyfabyoga.com/blog/

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