Stressed Out
diontre840
Posts: 50 Member
How do you guys deal with stress. Im very stressed out. Any tips. I go boxing but after the boxing session I'm still stressed. Any tips or advice would help!
6
Replies
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A little red wine?15
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Maybe look up breathing exercises? Concentrating on breathing often helps me erase whatever I'm obsessing about, even if it's temporary.2
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Have you considered trying yoga (yes, men do) or meditation? I know this seems extreme, but I believe that continued stress over a period of time will ruin your health. You look younger, so try to find a way to deal with it now.3
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my coworker suggested a couple of apps to me if you have an iphone. Calm and Noisli. Calm is guided meditation3
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I used to come home from work every day completely stressed out. I would toss and turn at night worrying about the pressures of my job.
Then one day I had an idea. There was a really large tree just outside my front door. It was the first thing I passed when I left for work in the morning and it was the last thing I passed as I came home. This tree became my "Worry Tree". Each day when I came home from work I'd stop for just a second at my worry tree and quickly let the tree know all the things that were stressing me out at work. Now I did this mentally, just in my head, I didn't want to look like a lunatic talking to a tree but I'd 'unload' all my stresses onto the worry tree. The next morning, as I left for work I'd stop by the tree again for just a second and pick up all the stresses and worries that I'd unloaded there last night. I also did this in reverse. Anything that was stressing me in my private life got left on the worry tree when I left for work so that my personal issues didn't impact on my work performance.
This worked wonders for me. I knew that each day when I got home form work I could unload all my stresses, concerns, worries and problems onto my worry tree and relax and enjoy my home life safe in the knowledge that they would all be there waiting for me ready to tackle at work the next day.
Pretty soon this became so ingrained in my personality that I didn't even need the tree any more and actually started to filter through to other areas of my life. I naturally started to stop stressing about things that I couldn't immediately address. Work stress was addressed at work. Home stresses were addressed at home. Relationship worries were addressed when the person was present and so on. I found that stress wasn't as stressful when it was relevant, in fact stress was beneficial in the right setting.
I also HIGHLY recommend watching the Ted talk by Kelly McGonigal about making stress your friend. It will change your perspective on stress being a bad thing.30 -
Going for a long run or swim de-stresses me.2
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MEDITATION! it works! Try doing just 5 minutes to start then increase from there... If you don't know how you can do a guided meditation on YouTube or you can just find a comfortable spot relax your body and focus on taking deep cleansing breaths... If u wish u can play some mellow music ..like jazz to help you relax.. Also you can light a candle or incense and focus on the flame or smoke to help relax your mind from all the thought chatter4
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Meditation
Walking
Cleaning
Playing games
Listening to music
Crafts
Talking about what is bothering me3 -
When I'm stressed, routine and structure in my day help me a lot. The less mental energy I have to use thinking about things or making decisions, the better.
Also, high intensity exercise helps me a lot - it's kind of an anxiety/adrenaline burn for me.2 -
Depends on the source of stress. If it's something that I have the power to change, I work on changing it. If it's not, I try to adjust other parts of my life in order to account for/make room for that stress.3
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Depends on the source of stress. If it's something that I have the power to change, I work on changing it. If it's not, I try to adjust other parts of my life in order to account for/make room for that stress.
This is my thought process as well. I like all the suggestions given as to how to manage stress, but more importantly, what is the source? You don't have to tell us if you don't want to. I'm just saying that maybe finding a solution, if possible, should be the first step.
Stress management is an important skill to learn, though, so try what the others have suggested, too.3 -
Stoicism, Buddhism, Taoism
All the ism's.2 -
I am going through a brutal reorg at work and it's been going on since May. I have found focusing on exercise (specifically for me, running) helps me feel in control of my life when everything else is up in the air.
True emotional stress makes me not want to eat, so that's been pretty good for my weight loss, though I'd rather take the pounds back and have more job security. There's a different kind of stress that has the opposite effect, though--it's more of a "what if I don't get this done by my deadline?" stress and that makes me want to eat everything.2 -
Question, OP- is your stress a constant thing that's always working in the back of your mind? Or is it an episodic thing that arises in a stressful situation but dissipates when the situation is over? I think the tips depend on what kind of stress you're feeling.2
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I run. Usually my super stressed runs feel really awful in the moment because I find myself sprinting and then walking and repeat. But afterwards I feel better, plus I got in some interval training so bonus.1
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diontre840 wrote: »How do you guys deal with stress. Im very stressed out. Any tips. I go boxing but after the boxing session I'm still stressed. Any tips or advice would help!
I do one the following things:
1. Run. It's my meditation
2. Lift weights. Better to take out frustrations on weights than people
3. Wine. Sometimes mama just needs a glass of wine to keep her sanity.2 -
Hike, Yoga, get lost in a captivating book, lift weights, chocolate, and then cardio to burn off the chocolate. Wait. Just forget the chocolate.1
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Mindfulness meditation helps me.1
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I pray.
I read or relax with a good book.
1 -
elsie6hickman wrote: »Have you considered trying yoga (yes, men do) or meditation? I know this seems extreme, but I believe that continued stress over a period of time will ruin your health. You look younger, so try to find a way to deal with it now.
There were at least 3 men in my last yoga class. Usually there are 4-6.1 -
I used to come home from work every day completely stressed out. I would toss and turn at night worrying about the pressures of my job.
Then one day I had an idea. There was a really large tree just outside my front door. It was the first thing I passed when I left for work in the morning and it was the last thing I passed as I came home. This tree became my "Worry Tree". Each day when I came home from work I'd stop for just a second at my worry tree and quickly let the tree know all the things that were stressing me out at work. Now I did this mentally, just in my head, I didn't want to look like a lunatic talking to a tree but I'd 'unload' all my stresses onto the worry tree. The next morning, as I left for work I'd stop by the tree again for just a second and pick up all the stresses and worries that I'd unloaded there last night. I also did this in reverse. Anything that was stressing me in my private life got left on the worry tree when I left for work so that my personal issues didn't impact on my work performance.
This worked wonders for me. I knew that each day when I got home form work I could unload all my stresses, concerns, worries and problems onto my worry tree and relax and enjoy my home life safe in the knowledge that they would all be there waiting for me ready to tackle at work the next day.
Pretty soon this became so ingrained in my personality that I didn't even need the tree any more and actually started to filter through to other areas of my life. I naturally started to stop stressing about things that I couldn't immediately address. Work stress was addressed at work. Home stresses were addressed at home. Relationship worries were addressed when the person was present and so on. I found that stress wasn't as stressful when it was relevant, in fact stress was beneficial in the right setting.
I also HIGHLY recommend watching the Ted talk by Kelly McGonigal about making stress your friend. It will change your perspective on stress being a bad thing.
... but how did the tree handle it?
Glad you're feeling better, anxiety is a *kitten*.1 -
Aromatherapy. a diffuser with lavender oil. Sounds corny but it actually helps,lol.1
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Is there any way for you to resolve some of the stress? That's where I'd start. Feeling even a small measure of control over one's circumstances can be incredibly helpful.2
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