Stress! We all have it — driving, work, shopping, kids, cooking, family, neighbors, bills, the list goes on.
Stress is a fact of life especially in our fast-paced, hurry hurry modern lives.
While most folks realize that stress has an enormous impact on their health, when you ask them how to best manage it, few healthy alternatives besides exercise or going to the gym are offered!
How Stress Affects Us Physically
Stress can affect us physically, emotionally, and mentally. For some, stress causes them to sweat, or get a dry mouth, or a headache, or tense muscles, or heartburn, or an upset stomach, or constipation, or diarrhea. For others they may become forgetful, or they can’t think of the word they’re looking for, or they get “brain fog”, or mind chatter, or they become irritable or depressed, or it might affect their ability to sleep. And maybe for you, it’s a combination of several of these.
Most doctors will now tell you that stress is the number one cause of illness. That’s because stress is a mild form of shock.
When you experience stress, the pores of your blood vessels dilate which allows blood protein to escape into the interstitial space (typically blood proteins are too large to pass through). Water is attracted to the blood protein so the water molecules in the blood follow the blood protein and surround the cells to the interstitial space preventing oxygen from getting to the cells. When cells aren’t able to get oxygen, they begin to die or mutate or become cancerous. In the short term, a chronically stressed person can even experience panic attacks.
So let’s look at some ways that we can de-stress naturally before it gets to that point.
Deep Breathing
Deep breathing is an easy stress reliever that has a number of benefits for the body. It oxygenates the blood, which “wakes up” the brain, relaxing muscles, and quieting the mind. People who experience air hunger from shallow breathing typically have thyroid or adrenal dysfunction.
The lungs are also the “pump” for the lymphatic system which is the “garbage picker upper” of the body. So as we deep breathe, the lymph fluid is pumped through the body which allows it to then gather up the blood proteins and carry them through the lymph nodes to be placed back into the bloodstream where they belong. Deep breathing exercises are especially helpful because you can do them anywhere, and they work quickly when you want to de-stress now.
To practice deep breathing exercises, breathe in slowly through your nose for a count of 5, hold for a count of 2, then exhale slowly through your mouth for a count of 8. Now, most people like to have flat abs and a big chest, but when you’re doing deep breathing exercises, forget that and focus on expanding your diaphragm. In for a count of 5, hold for a count of 2, then out for a count of 8.
For a boost to your lymphatic system (which will also boost your immune system) try deep breathing for 20 minutes, two times a day. The drive to and from work is usually a good time for this since you’re trapped in your car anyway. Another way to boost the lymphatic system is with gentle rebounding.
Guided Visualization
Guided visualization can provide significant stress-reducing benefits; including physical relaxation and helping you get inspiration that may help you better manage your life so that you can reduce stress. There are so many studies demonstrating the health benefits of guided visualization that many hospitals are incorporating it as an option to help patients with treatment.
Guided visualization CDs are available or you can do it yourself. Start by getting into a comfortable position, closing your eyes, and taking a couple of deep breaths. Once you’ve relaxed a little, begin to picture yourself in the middle of the most relaxing environment you can imagine. It may be floating in the clear, cool waters off a remote tropical island near a waterfall. It might be sitting by a fire in a secluded cabin, deep in the woods, sipping hot chocolate while snow gently falls. Or maybe it’s sitting under a tree next to a cool stream sipping lemonade.
As you imagine your scene, try to involve all your senses. What does it look like? How does it feel? Do you hear the sound of the waterfall, or the sound of the fire crackling in the fireplace, or the stream running down the sides of the bank and the birds chirping in the trees? Smell the smoke from the fire or the flowers in the meadow, or the refreshing sea breeze. Make your vision so real you can even taste the lemonade or the hot chocolate!
Stay there for as long as you like. Enjoy your “surroundings”, and let yourself be far from whatever stresses you. When you’re ready to come back to reality, count back from ten or twenty, and tell yourself that when you get to “one,” you’ll feel peaceful and alert and able to enjoy the rest of the day. When you return from your “vacation”, you’ll feel calm and refreshed without even leaving the room!
Music Therapy
Music therapy has shown many health benefits for people with conditions ranging from stress to cancer. When dealing with stress, the right music can actually lower your blood pressure, relax your body, and calm your mind.
Most people are aware that when they hear a particular song, they just want to get up and start dancing. There’s some music that puts them in a romantic mood, and then there’s other music that, as soon as it comes on the radio, they just want to shut off because it gets on their last nerve! That’s music therapy!
Music has a frequency (rate of vibration), sound has a frequency, emotions have a frequency. Similar frequencies resonate with one another. If you want to encourage a feeling of excitement in your home then you play up-tempo, fun, dancing music. If you want to bring about a calm, peaceful state, then play calm, peaceful music.
Two of my favorite CDs for de-stressing are Music to De-Stress and Music to Relax, both are performed by The Arcangelos Chamber Ensemble.
Essential Oils
Smell is the only one of the five senses directly linked to the limbic lobe of the brain (the emotional control center). From anxiety to depression, fatigue to stress, essential oils have been used for their effects on the emotions for a very long time. By diffusing essential oils or applying them to your body, the therapeutic constituents of essential oils help reestablish balance.
Known as the “grandmother” of essential oils, lavender is well known as an essential oil that promotes relaxation. There are even fabric softeners scented with lavender in order to “help you sleep.” Chamomile is another essential oil that is considered calming as is rose, jasmine, sandalwood, and cedarwood.
Foot Zone Therapy
Foot zone therapy dates back 5,000 years and was used in ancient China and India. Egyptian hieroglyphs and paintings also show the use of this method. Benefits vary but include release of tension, cleansing the body of toxins, improvement in circulation, harmony and peace in your home and life.
Foot zone sessions last approximately 45-60 minutes during which time the therapist will work the entire foot which corresponds to the entire body. During the zone, as blockages are felt in the signal for specific body parts or organs, the therapist will work to clear the blockage which assists the body in correcting the imbalance. To learn more about the benefits of a foot zone session and what to expect during and after a session, you can go here. It’s extremely important that your session is conducted by a Certified Foot Zone Therapist since much more happens during a session than meets the eye. To find a Foot Zone Therapist near you, go here.
Jin Shin Jyutsu Finger Holds
Jin Shin Jyutsu is an ancient Japanese method of energy work involving energy points (called Safety Energy Locks) and finger holds. In the early 1900s Jiro Murai was diagnosed with a terminal illness and told there was no doctor that could help him. He eventually asked his family to carry him to their mountain cabin and leave him there for seven days to meditate and return for him on the eighth day. While there Master Murai fasted and meditated and received instruction in what he called Jin Shin Jyutsu. On the seventh day, he lost consciousness and when his family came to retrieve him, he awoke and discovered he was healed.
Master Murai began teaching the art of Jin Shin Jyutsu to others and while doing so assisted a family member of the emperor of Japan. The family member was healed and in gratitude, Master Murai was granted access to the ancient records of Japan. As he studied these records, he discovered that the techniques he had been shown had been widely practiced before the birth of Buddha, Moses, and Kojiki.
The first finger pose shown below aids in releasing the fatigue, tension, and stress that can build up during the course of daily life. It assists in the release of worries, fears, and anger: hold the back of the left thumb, index, and middle fingers with the right thumb. Place the rest of the right fingers on the palm side of the left thumb, index, and middle fingers. Reverse for the right thumb and fingers.
The second finger pose below helps with timidity, mental confusion, depression, perfectionism, criticism, and frustration. Lightly hold the back of the left thumb with the palm side of the right hand wrapping the rest of the right fingers around the thumb to the palm side and tucking the right thumb over the right fingers. After balancing the thumb, move to the index finger, and then the pinkie finger holding each in a similar manner until you feel the balance. Reverse for the right thumb, index finger, and pinkie finger. (“Balance” feels differently but may be a sigh or deep breath, a release of tension, or a light energy vibration feeling. If you are unable to feel the balance, simply hold for 15-20 seconds and move to the next finger.)
To learn more about Jin Shin Jyutsu or to find a practitioner, click here.
So, there you have it! Six things you can do (most of them without the help of anyone else), anytime, anywhere to relieve stress naturally.
Andrea
Wow, nice to hear footzone therapy mentioned. It’s not something you hear much about. Our whole family has benefited greatly from it. We just wish that we didn’t have to drive so far to find somebody. Thanks for your great article!
Kathy Atkinson
Thanks Andrea! I’m happy to hear that you’ve been able to receive a foot zone. There are only three schools in the country that certify students in the foot zone technique, but there’s no lack of students so the availability of a practitioner is getting better. 🙂
Saeriu
In high school and college, I used visualization a lot before swim meets. I’d calm myself and then visualize myself swimming perfectly/precisely. It helped immensely. Now days, I like to drink chamomile/lavendar teas…just one cup a day is about perfect for me. I think unconsciencely I rub my fingers when nervous or stressed…it’s interesting to learn it’s a ‘real’ thing not just me fidgeting.
Kathy Atkinson
Good for you Saeriu! JSJ is really fascinating and I’m looking forward to learning more about this modality. 🙂 There is a book called The Touch of Healing by Alice Burmeister that’s available on Amazon if you’re interested in finding out more about it and learning additional hand holds. 🙂
Dan
I think it should also be considered to simply avoid the thing that is causing stress, if that is a possibility.
Kathy Atkinson
You’re right Dan, except the trick isn’t to avoid anything that might cause stress, but to learn not to let it cause you stress. 🙂 You can’t always avoid a busy day at work, or people on the highway who decide to do a dumb or your teenager getting a bad grade or coming home 2 hours past curfew, or…well, you get the idea. You should be able to have those kind of experieinces and still enjoy the day, and if you’re not, well, that’s a different class. 🙂
Most of these suggestions are things you can do at work or at home to help minimize the effects of stress on the body and help relieve the tension. 🙂
Thanks for reading and taking the time to comment! 🙂
Beth
I was wondering if you were going to address what was in that photo– I see a lot of parents who are stressed out because of their kids’ behavior or their schedules and they don’t realize that they have control over those things. It should be rare that the kids fight… seriously! And sometimes you have to give up something to make your schedule sane. I’m speaking from experience on both of these things and so daily stress isn’t there… I just need occasional stress relief.
Kathy Atkinson
I agre Beth, and good for you that you’re able to parent without stress! 🙂
I hope some of my suggestions are able to help you during those times of occasional stress.
Kathy Atkinson
By the way Beth, I’m wondering if you’ve ever heard of Nicholeen Peck and her book called A House United? She also teaches a parenting class called Teaching Self Government. She is AMAZING!! I can highly recommend her classes and her book. I’ve also heard her speak at some Holistic Living conferences and it was INCREDIBLE! She might have some CDs to listen to as well, but if you have a chance, at least check out her website and view her video clip from the television show World’s Strictest Parents. I think you’ll enjoy it. 🙂
Brenda
I think I’m the Queen of letting stress get too much for me! A few months ago, I finally went to Pittsburgh (60 mile drive) to my favorite health food store and asked for help because music and visualization weren’t helping. I was too far gone and needed a boost besides the extra B vitamins I was taking. He gave me Natra Bio (I think it was) Adrenal support and from King Bio their homeopathy spray: Anxiety & Nervousness. They helped me get a handle on it so I could function again and focus on relieving the stress so it would (hopefully) not bother me as much as it did that time.
I will be trying those finger holds and looking forward to reading about Foot Zone therapy! I’ve used the big toe hold for headaches before.
Kathy Atkinson
Wow Brenda! I’m so sorry! Sometimes we neglect ourselves to the point that we do need something extra – medication or supplementation. I’m glad to hear that you found something that works. You might want to look at amino acids as well, there’s an Amino Acid Therapy chart on my website under the Health & Wellness tab. Amino acids worked for me at a time when i wasn’t being to kind to myself and developed severe depression.
One other thing you might want to try in addition to the finger holds is deep breathing, because not only does it help with stress, but it pumps the lymphatic system as well.
~ Kathy
Kathy Atkinson
Well, and of course a foot zone. 😉
Mary
Some great suggestions here….totally intrigued by the finger hold. Can I ask…what’s the difference between reflexology and foot zone therapy….are they one in the same? I love how reflexology works for me and it’s been way too long since I’ve had a session but I’m curious if these are different.
Thanks!
Sarah, TheHealthyHomeEconomist
An in depth post about foot zone therapy is coming up very very soon 🙂
Kathy Atkinson
Hi Mary,
There is a difference, and the upcoming article will talk indepth about the history of foot zoning, but the main difference between the two is that in reflexology if you’re having a problem with your hip, the reflexologist will work the hip reflex, a problem with your knee and they’ll work the knee reflex, a problem with the back and they’ll work the back reflex, etc. With foot zoning, we realize that the body doesn’t work as individual parts, but as an integrated whole. So in a foot zone session, we’ll work the entire foot which corresponds to working the entire body. As we feel blockages along the way we’ll clear them, but what this does is increase circulation, remove toxins, and help bring the body back into balance which allows the body to heal itself in the order that it needs to heal. Because you might think that the problem is with your hip, but the root may really be your back or your knee and when you bring the body into balance, it can do what it was designed to do – heal itself. 🙂
Mary
Kathy, thanks for the detailed explanation. How new is this practice, as far as being practiced? I will certainly look forward to reading the next article about this and am now on a quest to find someone who practices this. This definitely sounds like something I need to try and get things back into balance with me.
Mary
Kathy Atkinson
Working on the hands and feet has been around for a very long time, but this particular method was taught in the United States for the first time in 1989 by Charles Ersdal who developed the technique.
The next article on Foot Zone Therapy will detail the advancement in techniques to what we have today.
There’s a directory of certified foot zone therapists on my website to help you Find a Foot Zoner Near You. 🙂 I hope you’re able to find one. I think you’ll love the session. 🙂
Caralyn @ glutenfreehappytummy
what a helpful post! i find that listening to music helps me relax. thanks for sharing!
Sarah, TheHealthyHomeEconomist
Maybe that’s one reason why so many are plugged into their Ipods or mp3s 24/7 .. they are stressed to the max perhaps??
Kathy Atkinson
Actually, one of the reasons they may be stressed is BECAUSE they’re plugged into their Ipod or mp3 24/7 – sensory overload.
Trent
The iPod helps me deal with my vertigo and facial tremors. Not sure how, but it does….But there is a point too where it becomes sensory overload.
Kathy Atkinson
Trent, I’d say you’re a good candidate for foot zoning. 😉
Sarah, TheHealthyHomeEconomist
I’d not heard of the finger holds before either. I will definitely be trying that.
Grandma Betty
You have some wonderful suggestions that I had not hear of before, i.e. finger hold.
My personal favorite is a soaking bath with Epsom salt, sea salt and essential oils! Just posted on my blog about the benefits of this wonderful health revitalizing detox bath.