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Stress!!

Queen_Dopplepopolis said:
So... is there a medical explination for how exercise can make you feel less stressed? Currently, I think "making time for 30 minutes of exercise?! I may end up not sleeping tonight... how can I make time for exercising?!"

Actually, yes.

Snipped from a medical article on exercise and stress:

"It improves blood flow to the brain, bringing sugars and oxygen, which may be needed when you are thinking intensely. When you think hard, the neurons of your brain function more intensely. As they do this, they build up toxic waste products, which cause foggy thinking in the short term, and can damage the brain in the long term. By exercising you speed the flow of blood through your brain, moving these waste products faster. You also improve this flow so that even when you are not exercising, waste is eliminated more efficiently. It can cause release of chemicals called endorphins into the blood stream. These give you a feeling of happiness and well-being.

Muscle tension increases during stress, and can cause a wide array of stress-related musculoskeletal problems, as well as general feelings of fatigue, and mental and emotional stress. Physical activity, on the other hand, leads to muscle relaxation. A feeling of physical relaxation characterizes a good workout's afterglow. After working hard, muscles relax. One study measuring the electrical activity of muscle found that activities such as walking, jogging and bicycling decrease muscle tension by more than 50 percent for up to 90 minutes after exercise. Physical relaxation translates into mental relaxation as well. This exercise afterglow of relaxation is an important part of exercise's anti-stress value for many people.

Rhythmic exercises such as walking, running, rowing and swimming increase alpha-wave activity in the brain. The electrical activity of the brain can be monitored in the laboratory using an instrument called an electroencephalogram (EEG). Alpha waves are associated with a calm mental state, such as that produced by meditation or chanting. The rhythmic breathing that occurs during some forms of exercise also contributes to an increase in alpha-wave activity. Rhythmic activity performed to music may be stress-relieving in other ways as well.

Some research suggests that regular exercise of moderate intensity may provide a sort of dress rehearsal for stress. Several studies have found that people who exercise regularly have a less physical response to laboratory stressors, such as difficult mental arithmetic tests. Other studies have found that physically fit subjects recover more quickly than sedentary peers from stressors such as cold exposure or emotional frustration. Your response to a session of moderately vigorous exercise resembles your response to stress--elevated metabolic rate, cardiac output, energy substrate levels, muscle tension, stress hormones, etc. Regular exercise may "train " the body to cope with and recover more quickly from emotional stress, as well as exercise stress."


I find everything above to be very true...I can really tell the difference in my mental acuity if I go more than a couple of days without exercise...my mind isn't as sharp, I become more irritable and snap at people much more readily.

~ OO
 

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Queen_Dopplepopolis said:
(1) Make a List. :)
(2) Revise my Honors English Personal Narrative. Due 10/6.
(3) Get my reader's card at the National Archives before 10/12.
(4) Using my new reader's card, find at least 5 more primary sources for my senior capstone (aka, thesis).
(5) Compile sources into bibliography for my senior capstone. Due 10/12.
(6) Write my 4-5 page response paper for Ethics in the Professions. Due 10/6.
(7) Call the MD DOT to work out what's up with my registration and what else I have to do to get it all switched over.
(8) Go to campus and pick up my reading packed from Professor Norris' office.
(9) Send notice to Fairfax County, VA about my change of address/find out how to do it online.
(10) Sleep.

(11) Make time for the rowing machine. :)
 



Well, as someone who is one week away from completing a 12 week program in stress management, I can say that there is good advice here.

On exercise: I does help, but don't add to the stress by feeling you have to do a 30 minute workout daily. Instead, when you are feeling overwhelmed and usually end up vegging in front of the TV with a bowl of ice cream, or some of that sort, take 15 minutes for a brisk walk.

Queen D said:
Last week, as I used my psychic mind powers to look into the future, I knew that things were going to start to get bad this week. Papers are coming due, I need to work a few extra hours to make up for lost hours last week, and my preliminary bibliography for my thesis is due a week from tomorrow. Thinking that I would really be doing myself some good, I took Wednesday off of everything and sat at home trying to get my life prioritized. It didn't work. The day that I took off is coming back to haunt me and I've got an insane amount of work to do before Thursday and I'm officially freaking out.

Nothing bad has happen, yet... but I'm teetering on the edge. If I can make it through to next Wednesday, everything will blow over and things should be fine. However, getting there will nearly kill me.

This is called cognitive distortion. You are predicting the future, something that cannot be done reliably (if you can, drop the thesis and open a psychic studio). Don't predict how bad things will be, it accomplishes nothing. For the same reason, try not to look back at Wednesday with regret. Live in the moment.

Making a list helps, but only if you don't obsess about the length of the list etc. Take the tasks one at a time. Focus on the task at hand. We live in an age where multi-tasking is considered the norm, but the human mind is not an efficient multi-tasker.

Stop for one minute (more if you can, 10-15 is ideal). Breathe slowly and deeply from the abdomen, focusing on your breath. Try and quiet your mind. Allow intruding thoughts to slip by and keep focused on your breathing. It takes practice, but it can really work.

Last thing: have a positive outlook. Negativity breeds more stress. Appreciate your accomplishments and find other small things to celebrate - enjoy the green light you made rather than rant about the red light you got caught at.

Dang, I'm starting to sound like some new-age hippie. I guess this program has worked.
 

Queen_Dopplepopolis said:
(3) Get my reader's card at the National Archives before 10/12.
(4) Using my new reader's card, find at least 5 more primary sources for my senior capstone (aka, thesis).
(5) Compile sources into bibliography for my senior capstone. Due 10/12.
Congrats, you're already on your way to success. I feel I should note, just from a quick scan of your list:

If your bibliography is due on 10/12, and you need 5 more sources for the capstone (which means, I'm guessing, 5 more sources for your bibliography), then you need to get the reader's card at the NA significantly before 10/12 (it seems to me) in order to have time to make sure you get the sources. I'd move number (3) up to, say 10/8, which will leave you some research room, because as you already know, even if you schedule things, other things do come up, and it's always nice to have some room to take up slack.

Hope that helps.

Warrior Poet

P.S. Don't forget to find time to spend either by yourself, or with others, depending on how you "recharge" your batteries. It can be anything: exercise, reading a magazine article (I'd stay away from TV, as that can too easily suck me in, but you may be different), carrying pumpkins to the car ;) , listening to some music, watching the sunset, listening to the water at the ocean, etc. Also, don't forget to EAT! It's easy to eat poorly when highly stressed, and your body needs nutrients because when you're stressed, you're tapping those resources more heavily than other times, so you need to make sure your food intake remains balanced and healthy. Don't eat too heavy, and don't forget breakfast (fruit is good, as are grains, starts the metabolism going and gets your body ready for the rest of the day). Good luck!
 

Thornir Alekeg said:
You are predicting the future, something that cannot be done reliably (if you can, drop the thesis and open a psychic studio).
Or better yet, start investing in the stock market.

Thornir Alekeg said:
Don't predict how bad things will be, it accomplishes nothing. For the same reason, try not to look back at Wednesday with regret. Live in the moment.
Excellent advice.

It goes along with something else that is often counterintuitive: when you have to speed up, slow down. Sounds wacky. But you're going to work better if you slow down and concentrate on what you're working on right now, and get it done properly, than trying to rush through it anticipating the next task. Whoops, Thornir already said this, note below:

Thornir Alekeg said:
Making a list helps, but only if you don't obsess about the length of the list etc. Take the tasks one at a time. Focus on the task at hand. We live in an age where multi-tasking is considered the norm, but the human mind is not an efficient multi-tasker.

Stop for one minute (more if you can, 10-15 is ideal). Breathe slowly and deeply from the abdomen, focusing on your breath. Try and quiet your mind. Allow intruding thoughts to slip by and keep focused on your breathing. It takes practice, but it can really work.

Wise, wise! Good luck, and hang in there. You'll do fine.

Warrior Poet
 

Okay.

I'm leaving work after I post this message. I will be stopping by campus to pick up a packet of readings and calling the MD DOT while I travel.

After that, it's off to the National Archives to get my reader's card. I can't do any research tonight because the last pull time is at 3pm.

When I get home, I will revise my honors English paper (if it's really good, I can win a $200 prize from the literature department!). After that, it's time to start working on my Ethics paper - will have a lot of reading and outlining to do before I can actually start writing, but if I can get the reading done, the paper should come very quickly tomorrow night. Hopefully, The Universe will take care of the crap with Fairfax County, VA.

*deep breath*

I'll update later tonight and you'll all know if I actually accomplished these goals, or not!
 


I've always found "pumpkin carrying" to be a very effective means of stress relief.
Seriously, when I'm freaking out over a deadline or work problem, I know I need to take some time out for a little R&R (adult or otherwise) with the wife.
Puts things in perspective, and counts as 30 minutes (or more!) of exercise. :D
 

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