Saturday, May 23, 2020
Tips to Reduce Stress at Work - Classy Career Girl
Tips to Reduce Stress at Work The alarm goes off. You press snooze. Youre so tiredjust a few more minutes. AWAKE! I overslept. I have 10 minutes to get ready before Iâm supposed to be at the office. Adrenaline shoots through your body and propels you into the shower. You make it out the front door in a miraculous 12 minutes. No morning ritual hot tea. So, you pick up a coffee on the go. Walking into the building, the heel of your shoe catches, and you drop the coffee. People around you glare angrily, wiping coffee from their shoes. Adrenaline pours through your system as you clean up the coffee and collect your things. You just want to get to my desk. You sit at your deskfinallytrying to breathe normally. You open Facebook and see that you were left out of a fun girls night. Adrenaline floods your body again. You get lost in your thoughts. A meeting reminder pops up, and you have 15 minutes to get focused to give a big presentation. More adrenaline again swarms your body. You bring up the file you prepared yesterday and read through the info. The five-minute notification pops up. Itâs time. You donât usually stress about meetings, but youre so stressed you just canât relax. WHAT IS HAPPENING! The stress response is not all bad. That adrenaline-laced response, also called fight or flight, causes us to pull away from a hot iron. It helps keep us safe. But, when we operate in a constant state of stress and adrenaline, our bodies have a difficult time relaxing. Dr. Kristen Race, PhD, and founder of Mindful Life, talks about the stress response of the body in her TEDx talk. Dr. Race says that we start at a baseline of being relaxed, and in that state the prefrontal cortex and logical, decision-making part of our brain is in charge. But, when something triggers the stress response, our faster, emotional limbic system responds. Emotional doesnât typically equal rational. With this flooding of chemicals like adrenaline in our bodies, it takes the brain nearly 20 minutes to re-establish communication with the rational, prefrontal cortex after a stress response occurs. Eventually, your baseline will change. You will no longer operate in the relaxed, logical part of your brain. Instead, anything can cause a stress response. Someone asks a question and you snap in response. Maybe youâve experienced this phenomenon. Ever had a time where you overreacted and werenât sure why? Luckily our brains are trainable. If you donât take a little time to stop the cycle, it will continue. The longer we go without taking time and the more distractions we use to make us feel better, the further we are from getting the relaxation and relief we truly desire. Maybe youâre thinking like Jessie Spano, âNo time! Thereâs never any time!â And itâs true, we fill our days to the MAX. But, training our brains and bodies to relax can take as little as 60 seconds. Tips to Reduce Stress at Work So what would I do with those âhypotheticalâ 5 minutes in the stressful story above? Heres how I chose to handle it. I took a 1-minute for a Square Breath (keep reading below for details), 3 minutes for a bathroom break, and I made it to my meeting one minute early. One minute a few times a day will start the retraining of the response of the brain. Just one minute will help you relax. When Iâm stressed and strapped for time, I practice gratitude, listening, and breathing. I frequently hear the phrase âobserve your breathing,â which is great. And at the same time doesnât always equate to something actionable for me. So, hereâs an easy 60-second breath that has helped me. Itâs called Square Breath. Iâve heard it from several different yoga instructors and psychologists. Hereâs how it works: Inhale through your nose for 3 seconds. Hold the breath in for 3 seconds. Exhale through your nose for 3 seconds. Hold the breath out for 3 seconds. Repeat 3-5 times. Try to increase the time from 3 seconds to 5 seconds, maybe even 10 seconds. If you have trouble concentrating, add the thought of something youâre grateful for at each hold. [RELATED: 5 Ways to Beat Burnout] Create a reminder in your calendar, on your phone or on your desk to take that one minute of breathing for you. Just one minute is all you need to turn around your entire day.
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