52 Proven Stress Reducers
1.
Get up fifteen minutes earlier in the morning. The
inevitable morning mishaps will be less stressful.
2.
Prepare for the morning the evening before. Set the
break-fast table, make lunches, put out the clothes you plan
to wear, etc…
3.
Don’t rely on your memory. Write down appointment times,
when to pick up the laundry, when library books are due,
etc. (“The palest ink is better than the most retentive
memory.” - Old Chinese Proverb)
4.
Do nothing which, after being done, leads you to tell a lie.
5.
Make duplicates of all keys. Bury a house key in a secret
spot in the garden and carry a duplicate car key in your
wallet, apart from your key ring.
6.
Practice preventative maintenance. Your car, appliances,
home, and relationships will be less likely to break
down/fall apart “at the worst possible moment.”
7.
Eliminate (or restrict) the amount of caffeine in your diet.
8.
Procrastination is stressful. Whatever you want to do
tomorrow, do today; whatever you want to do today, do
it now.
9.
Plan ahead. Don’t let the gas tank get below one-quarter
full, keep a well-stocked “emergency shelf” of home staples,
don’t wait until you’re down to your last bus token or
postage stamp to buy more, etc.
10.
Don’t put up with something that doesn’t work right. If
your alarm clock, wallet, shoe laces, windshield wipers -
whatever - are a constant aggravation, get them fixed or get
new ones.
11.
Allow 15 minutes of extra time to get to appointments. Plan
to arrive at an airport two hours before domestic
departures.
12.
Be prepared to wait. A paperback can make a wait in a post
office line almost pleasant.
13.
Always set up contingency plans “just in case.” (“If for
some reason either of us is delayed, here’s what we’ll do…”
kind of thing. Or, “if we get split up in the shopping
center, here’s where we’ll meet.”)
14.
Relax your standards. The world will not end if the grass
doesn’t get mowed this weekend, if the sheets have to be
changed on Sunday instead of Saturday, etc.
15.
Pollyanna-Power! For every one thing that goes wrong, there
are probably 10 or 50 of 100 blessings. Count ‘em!
16.
Ask questions. Taking a few moments to repeat back
directions, what someone expects of you, etc., can save
hours. (The old “the hurrieder I go, the behinder I get”
idea.)
17.
Say “NO!” Saying no to extra projects, social activities,
and invitations you know you don’t have the time or energy
for takes practice, self-respect, and a belief that
everyone, everyday needs quiet time to relax and be alone.
18.
Unplug your phone. Want to take a long bath, meditate, sleep
or read without interruption? Drum up the courage to
temporarily disconnect. (The possibility of there being a
terrible emergency in the next hour or so is almost nil.)
19.
Turn “needs” into preferences. Our basic physical
needs translate into food and water, and keeping warm.
Everything else is a preference. Don’t get attached to
preferences.
20.
Simplify, simplify, simplify.
21.
Make friends with non-worriers. Nothing can get you into the
habit or worrying faster than associating with chronic
worriers.
22.
Take a hot bath or shower (or a cool one, in the summer) to
relieve tension.
23.
Wear earplugs. If you need to find quiet at home but junior
must practice piano, pop in some earplugs (available at any
drugstore) and smile.
24.
Get enough sleep. If necessary, use an alarm clock to remind
you to go to bed.
25.
Create order out of chaos. Organize your home and workspace
so that you always know exactly where things are. Put things
away where they belong and you won’t have to go through the
stress of losing things.
26.
When feeling stressed, most people tend to breathe in short,
shallow breaths. When you breathe like this, stale air is
not expelled, oxidation of the tissues is incomplete, and
muscle tension frequently results. Check your
breathing throughout the day, and before, during, and
after high-pressure situations. If you find your
stomach muscles are knotted and your breathing is shallow,
relax all your muscles and take several deep, slow breaths.
Note how, when you’re relaxed, both your abdomen and
chest expand when you breathe.
27.
Writing your thoughts and feelings down (in a journal, or on
paper to be thrown away) can help you clarify things and can
give you a renewed perspective.
28.
Try the following yoga technique whenever you feel the need
to relax: inhale deeply through your nose to the count of
eight. Then, with lips puckered, exhale very slowly through
your mouth to the count of 16, or for as long as you can.
Concentrate on the long sighing sound and feel the tension
dissolve. Repeat 10 times.
29.
Inoculate yourself against a feared event. Just as a vaccine
containing a virus can protect you from illness, if you
expose yourself to one or more of the dreaded aspects of an
experience beforehand, you often can mitigate your fears.
Example: before speaking in public, take time to go over
every part of the experience in your mind. Imagine what
you’ll wear, what the audience will look like, how you will
present your talk, what the questions will be and how you
will answer them, etc. Visualize the experience the way you
would have it be. You’ll likely find that when the time
comes to make the actual presentation, it will be “old hat”
and much of
your
anxiety will have fled.
30.
When the stress of having to get a job done gets in the way
of getting the job done, diversion - a voluntary change in
activity and/or environment - may be just what you need.
31.
Get up and stretch periodically if your job requires that
you’ll sit for extended periods.
32.
One of the most obvious ways to avoid unnecessary stress is
to select an environment (work, home, leisure) which is in
line with your personal needs and desires. If you hate desk
jobs, don’t accept a job which requires that you sit at a
desk all day. If you hate to talk politics, don’t associate
with people who love to talk politics, etc.
33.
Learn to live one day at a time.
34.
Everyday, do something you really enjoy.
35.
Add an ounce of love to everything you do.
36.
Talk it out. Discussing your problems with a trusted friend
can help clear your mind of confusion so you can concentrate
on problem solving.
37.
Do something for somebody else.
38.
Focus on understanding rather than on being understood, on
loving rather than on being loved.
39.
Do something that will improve your appearance. Looking
better can help you feel better.
40.
Schedule a realistic day. Avoid the tendency to schedule
back-to-back appointments; allow time between appointments
for a breathing spell.
41.
Become more flexible. Some things are worth not doing
perfectly and some issues are well to compromise upon.
42.
Eliminate destructive self-talk: “I’m too old to…,” “I’m too
fat to…,” etc.
43.
Use your weekend time for a change of pace. If your work
week is slow and patterned, make sure there is action and
time for spontaneity built into your weekends. If your work
week is fast-paced and full of people and deadlines, seek
peace and solitude during your days off. Feel as if you
aren’t accomplishing anything tangible at work? Tackle a job
on the weekend which you can finish to your satisfaction.
44.
“Worry about the pennies and the dollars will take care of
themselves. That’s another way of saying: take care of the
todays as best you can and the yesterdays and tomorrows will
take care of themselves.
45.
Do one thing at a time. When you are with someone, be with
that person and with no one or nothing else. When you are
busy with a project, concentrate on doing that
project and forget about everything else you have to do.
46.
Allow yourself time - everyday - for privacy, quiet, and
introspection.
47.
If an especially “un-pleasant” task faces you, do it early
in the day and get it over with. Then the rest of your day
will be free of anxiety.
48.
Learn to delegate responsibility to capable others.
49.
Don’t forget to take a lunch break. Try to get away from
your desk or work area in body and mind, even if it’s
just for 15 or 20 minutes.
50.
Forget counting to 10. Count to 1,000 before doing something
or saying anything that could make matters worse.
51.
Have a forgiving view of events and people. Accept the fact
that we live in an imperfect world.
52.
Have an optimistic view of the world. Believe that most
people are doing the best they can.
From: The
Hope Heart Institute, Seattle, WA
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