Five Things You Don't (And Should!) Know About Stress
by: Steven Barnes
Whether it’s called stress management, relaxation training, or its newest
incarnation, “Resiliancy,” it seems that the question of healthy response to the
stress of daily life is on everyone’s mind. But it’s important to remember a few
things about stress that are rarely discussed—if known at all!
1) Stress won’t hurt you. Hans Selye, the “father of stress” was a
polylinguist, whose first language was not English. Before he died, he said
that, had his command of English been more precise, he would have been known as
the “Father of Strain” rather than stress. What’s the difference? Enormous, from
an engineering standpoint. Stress is pressure divided by unit area, whereas
strain is measured in deformation per unit length. In other words, while strain
speaks to the load you are carrying, strain deals with the degree to which that
load warps you out of true. In other words, it is NOT stress that hurts you. It
is strain.
2) Stress is necessary for life and growth. Far from being something you
avoid, when healthy, the body and mind respond to environmental stress by
becoming stronger. Look at this in the arena of physical fitness. Imagine a
triangle with each of the three corners having a different designation: Stress,
nutrition, and rest. Stress equals exercise, nutrition equals the foods taken in
before and after the exercise, and rest equals…well, rest. If you have either
too much or too little of any of these, the body breaks down. Note that
astronauts in orbit must be very careful to stress their bodies daily with
stationary bicycles and other apparatus: zero gravity decreases stress to the
point that the bones literally begin to lose calcium. The truth is that, in
life, we are rewarded largely for how much stress we can take without breaking.
The intelligent approach is to both reduce unnecessary stress and to increase
our ability to handle healthy stress without straining.
3) Come of the best research comes from our former enemies! Russian research
into the body-mind dynamic has produced valuable results. They figure that any
physical technique has three aspects: Breath, Motion, and Structure, and that
these three are dependant upon one another. Stress “dis-integrates” this
structure as it morphs into strain. The first to be disturbed is almost always
breathing. This is the reason that martial arts, yoga, Sufi Dancing and so many
other disciplines can use the physical as a vehicle for spiritual
transformation. As we learn to handle greater and greater amounts of stress with
grace, we naturally evolve to higher levels of integration and performance. It
is our birthright.
4) It doesn’t take years to learn proper breathing techniques. Seek out a Chi
Gung, yoga, or Tai Chi teacher and say you want to learn proper belly breathing.
A good teacher can convey the basics of this critical skill in an hour or less.
5) You don’t have to meditate for an hour a day to get the benefits. While
it’s fabulous to spend two twenty minute sessions a day, massive benefits can be
gained with just five minutes a day. Here’s the trick: it’s not five minutes all
at one time, it’s five one minute sessions spaced through the day. At every hour
divisible by 3: 9, 12, 3, 6, and 9, simply stop and breathe properly for sixty
seconds. You can do this while walking down the street, or sitting in a business
meeting. The important thing is to learn a proper technique, and to practice it
briefly, and correctly. This single act will improve posture, energy, digestion,
and turn stress into high performance. Five minutes a day…it will seem a pain at
first, but once you’ve got the hang of it, it’s the best 300 second investment
you’ll ever make!
About The Author
Steven Barnes is a certified hypnotherapist, black belt martial artist,
Tai Chi instructor, and creator of the FIVE MINUTE MIRACLE stress-busting
program. Learn more at:
http://www.lifewrite.com. |
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