T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
349.1 | | INK::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Wed Apr 15 1987 16:46 | 15 |
| Well, any unusual stress I might have been subjected to was drowned
out in the _generated_ styress of having my mother-in-law visit
for the last 1.5 weeks. [Not kidding. She can be very stressful.]
However, the day before yesterday, by brain was a bit out of gear
and I did some rather silly things; however, I suppose that doe4sn't
count.
For relaxing ... this varies with people: some can meditate, others
do it by vigorous activity (sort of "burn off the adreniline"
operations), some sleep profoundly. Calm, soft music, gereen light
all can help.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
349.2 | Relaxation Drills and Breathing Exercises | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Wed Apr 15 1987 17:52 | 12 |
| There are also relaxation drills and breathing exercises. In the
relaxation drills, you tense up various muscle groups, then let
go and pay careful attention to the feeling of relaxation that results.
The immediate benefit is to loosen you up rather in the way exercise
would. The longer-term benefit is to teach you to recognize how
tension and relaxation feel in your body.
In the breathing exercises, you go through various procedures centering
on breathing from your diaphram. This is useful if you hyperventilate
as part of your unwanted stress reactions. (E.g. panic attacks.)
Earl Wajenberg
|
349.3 | STRESS? TELL ME ABOUT IT! | GRECO::MISTOVICH | | Wed Apr 15 1987 18:04 | 22 |
349.4 | | VIKING::HARDY | | Wed Apr 15 1987 18:09 | 29 |
| I do not know where node ORION:: is, but observing the
personal-name you have set for your note, it occurs to me that you
may find things a bit drab after the exhilaration of the recent
tour of your favorite band.
Multiple stresses are not additive; they are multiplicative. Try
doing something completely different from your ordinary life, but
very simple and focussed. When I was feeling stressed a while
back I found that buying a cheap target bow and plinking arrows at
a piece of styrofoam was very soothing. Bicycling or solving
puzzles might also help.
I recall a quote, somewhere, to the effect that a civilized human
being was capable of worrying about things in all parts of the
world. This was a humorous way of saying that because we can
read, can reflect on the past and anticipate the future, we can
react to fears and threats which do not obviously exist in the
here and now. That's how voodoo death curses work. One reason
meditation helps is that most forms of meditation slow down the
stream of associations that keep the stresses in your mind.
Best of all, of course, would be to remove the stresses so that
you do not have to distract yourself from them.
Me? I've been feeling wicked good since the end of February.
Must be the spring coming on...but then, if there were any baleful
psychic influences, I'd probably be the last to know!
Pat Hardy
|
349.5 | | MILRAT::KEEFE | | Thu Apr 16 1987 09:44 | 3 |
| Also, see note 248.0 of this conference.
- Bill
|
349.6 | Walk me out in the green light... | ORION::HERBERT | Walk me out in the morning dew... | Thu Apr 16 1987 12:34 | 10 |
| Re: ALL
Thanks for your replies. Everything fits.
Re: .1
Green light? Besides being my favorite color, what benefits
come from green light?
Jerri
|
349.7 | | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Thu Apr 16 1987 12:40 | 13 |
| Re .6:
Oddly, green is considered a very restful color and promotes relaxation
for many people. Surrounding oneself with green, especially the
more plant-colored greens, the better many people seem to feel.
An esoteric suggestion, too, is that some interpretations of the
chakras associate green with the heart, and that might be a factor,
too. Also, some healing color therapies use green. [In the U.S.,
of course, green is associated with money, but that's another matter.
:-)]
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
349.8 | Stress! Can't live with it. Can't live without it. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu Apr 16 1987 13:37 | 56 |
| "Importance" is a complicated concept. Certainly eating (at all) is much
more urgent than stress management. If you don't eat, you will die within
a few weeks. If you don't manage your stress properly you'll probably last
longer than that.
But you will suffer worse health and be less happy, and there is a good
chance that you will eventually die of its effects (cardiovascular disease,
and possibly cancer and a weaker immune system). I would say that
good stress management is closer to "proper" nutrition than to eating at
all.
No I don't think that it was something forgotten -- since I don't think
that it was something which was generally known in other cultures either.
It is something which has *become* of critical importance in our culture,
however.
I don't know whether other cultures have subjected their members to more
or less stress than ours has. It seems to me to be a rather near thing,
and I could probably justify either position. But what *has* changed is
the allowed response to most of the stress.
Stress involves, as you said, the body preparing for fight/flight response.
If one of those responses is not appropriate than there are, apparently,
long term effects on the body, brain and mind. It is there where our
culture differs from less technological ones -- it is much rarer for
physical action to be an appropriate response to the stressful stimulus.
Meditational practices are generally associated with spiritual development
by an "elite" few. In few cultures are they practiced by most people.
It would seem that spiritual development requires or is made easier by
exceptionally low levels of stress. Either that or the stress relieving
properties of meditation are an irrelevant (to the developers) side-effect.
Three things seem to help with stress-management (according to what I've
read) (1) avoid stressful stimuli (rarely very practical) (2) physical
activity (i.e., regular exercise) and (3) "meditational" (broadly
defined) techniques.
In the short term (2) is probably the best course of action if your "blahs"
are caused by stress. Increase your level of activity. If you don't
exercise -- start. If you do exercise -- increase your level by a bit.
Don't overdo it, of course.
In the long term both (2) and (3) suffer from the same problem. People
don't stick to them. I'm going to recommend a book, but with a grain of
salt. I have not tried the stress management system that the book discusses
but it makes a lot of sense to me. And it is the only system I have heard
about that it seems likely to me that a significant number of people who
stick with it a few months will still be using it after a few years.
The book is "QR: The Quieting Reflex" and is by Charles F. Stroebel. It
has been published in paperback (perhaps only in paperback). The DEC
Hudson (HLO) library has a copy -- first come first serve for interlibrary
loan.
Topher
|
349.9 | Funny you should mention Synchonicity, dept. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu Apr 16 1987 13:49 | 26 |
| Yesterday afternoon I read the base note, prepared the previous
reply, sent it to Jerri (So she could get first crack on interlibrary
loan of the book), and went home.
Jerri reports that the book is listed as "missing", by the way.
Anyway, I got home and there were two magazines in the mail. This
week's New Scientist and the next (May) issue of Scientific American.
Both have survey articles about Psyhoimunology. The NS article
is by a British researcher in the field -- quite good. The SA article
is the last in the Science and the Citizen section (this section
is devoted to short articles about scientific current events).
Neither seemed to have been triggered by any special events or
announcements in the field. It seemingly just looked to both editors
like it was time for a survey of a new and exciting field (of course,
what seems to be may not be, there could be alot of things which
I don't know about which inspired both editors).
Psychoimmunology is the study of the physiological mechanisms by
which the brain/mind effect the immune system. Although such
connections were common knowledge, until recently virtually nothing
was known about how it worked. It now seems that hormones produced
by the brain can effect the immune system both directly and indirectly
making it (or some part of it) either stronger or weaker.
Topher
|
349.10 | | AOXOA::STANLEY | Brother Esau | Thu Apr 16 1987 13:53 | 7 |
| re: missing book
I got that book from the HLO library about six months ago. I was also listed
as missing at that time. It seems that it was put in the wrong place. Maybe
that is still the case.
Dave
|
349.11 | Not there. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu Apr 16 1987 14:16 | 6 |
| RE: .10
Nope. I checked where I had found it that time.
Topher
|
349.12 | Two more cents | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Fri Apr 17 1987 10:12 | 62 |
| I have found over the years an interesting detail concerning my
own levels of stress. The amount of hard work, change, uncertainty,
et al that I can withstand is dramatically increased if (1) I can
obtain a particular relief method that I know works or (2) I have
enough outward events in my life to make the stress I feel seem
more "valid".
Unlike many I've talked to, I know exactly how to ring my chimes,
what will give me relief from stress. None of these nostrums are
drug induced, by the way. They are really very simple, food and
sleep being the chief two. My psyche and soma are very tightly
connected. When I am able to attend to all my Level 1 needs on
the Maslow Hierarchy, I can shrug off a lot more than when I am
deprived of them. My husband, after 13-odd years of marriage, still
watches in amazement as I go from from shrivelled to ebullient when
we, say, go to dinner after a hard day or week.
Now, the only problems with this are that life being what it is,
I can't always get what I need when I need it. And the stress levels
rise proportionately. At the extreme end, after being deprived
of what I need for long enough, it no longer works ("the operation
was a success, but the patient died"). The other problem is that
I am seen as lazy, antisocial, unmotivated, or other unflattering
adjectives laid on me by acquaintances whose constitutions can run
on empty. And _that_ can cause my stress levels to rise, the feeling
that I have no right to take the cure that will help me.
Which brings me to the second major cause of real stress in my life:
feeling lonely and unsupported by the important people in my life.
The connection between social connectedness and approval with
psychological well-being has been studied with interest by
sociologists. It does seem to be true for me that feeling the
support of others makes anything feel better. But what happens
when people either don't believe I have any right to feel stressed,
or are in such bad circumstances that I feel foolish confiding my own
stress levels? My mother is being crushed by her job at the same
as she is coping with her mother's slow death; one friend is out
of work and frantically job-hunting with disappointing results;
another, a doctor, is struggling to continue as a practicing OB/GYN
while working to help change the scene that has made that field
so terrible to work in. It seems only proper that I comfort them,
not the other way around. But the simple fact of not feeling able
to blow off steam occasionally to another human being causes things
that would normally be inconsequential to eventually mushroom into
a black frame of mind.
I also agree that the amount of change and uncertainty that our
society asks us to cope with are enormous today. (And I feel real
sympathy for the Reply that spoke of the uncertainty in the job,
what with unrealized promotions, quicksand management, dual
responsibilities and all . . . I've been there too.)
But you might ask yourself if some relief valve or support structure
has been denied you lately that you were accustomed to. These lacks
can be surprisingly subtle! It's a good idea to occasionally look
inward and ask yourself "what do I really need here?" All the
suggestions we could make (including my own) will only work if they
fit your particular needs.
Take care,
Marcia
|
349.13 | Support through acceptance | ORION::HERBERT | Walk me out in the morning dew... | Fri Apr 17 1987 12:37 | 39 |
| Re: .12
> The connection between social connectedness and approval with
> psychological well-being has been studied with interest by
> sociologists. It does seem to be true for me that feeling the
> support of others makes anything feel better.
Marcia; I can really relate to this. I have always been very
open (probably too much) with sharing my thoughts and feelings
with other people...especially when I'm trying to figure something
out for myself. I find comfort and answers by bouncing things off
of other people. And I usually cross my fingers that people won't
think I'm too strange by the things I say. Some do, some don't.
Their comments to my questions only matter sometimes because my
major learning experience comes from observing my own thoughts and
comments.
That old saying, "We teach what we want to learn" is definitely
going on for me all of the time. I've read a lot, heard a lot,
and experienced a lot, and I usually have something (positive, I
hope) to say about situations in life. But I don't say those things
for the purpose of giving someone an "answer"...I say them because
I'm still trying to figure how they fit in, and if they're valid,
and as a nice side-effect, I would hope the other person would at
least gain some inspiration for themselves while I'm trying to
figure out my own puzzle.
Having support from people is really important. Not the kind of
support where one would expect to receive all the answers from
someone else, and not the kind of support where someone would expect
sympathy. But the support of just being there, and letting the
person speak openly about their feelings and fears so that they can
learn from it themselves without feeling they're going to be judged
or condemned by the listener. We don't always get listeners like
that, and that's when we have to be extra strong in ourselves. But
I really think we're all in this together and the sooner we realize
that, the happier we'll all be.
Jerri
|
349.14 | Absolutely! And ... | DUNE::DAHLGREN | Stress + Ed = Stressed! | Wed Apr 22 1987 16:15 | 147 |
| Wow, lots of good replies in a short time. I first saw this note today
and just had to jump in. It's going to be a long reply saying:
THINGS THAT MAKE YOU FEEL BETTER INCLUDE
-- understanding support (can't be said enough);
-- laughing;
-- professional therapy (for some);
-- medicine (for some);
-- distraction (sometimes).
THINGS THAT MAKE YOU FEEL WORSE INCLUDE:
-- denial;
-- intellectualizing;
-- bad air;
-- bad lighting;
-- life at DEC (sometimes);
-- the economy;
-- non-understanding non-support;
-- getting better (maybe).
If reading a long, wide-ranging note stresses you, please skip this
reply because I'm just trying to help :')
Stress is one of those weird things in life where, if the other person
hasn't been there, they don't have any idea what you're talking about.
My parents, for example, are just in a different time zone! As
products of the Great Depression (!), they've been taught that denial
is the best tool. My mother's a turn-that-frown-upside-down type,
but hearing this kind of advice only makes me feel worse.
My father will sympathize, especially about work problems, and say
there were many times when he felt like "throwing his bag of tools
in the river" (he was a bricklayer). This is a vivid image for me
and makes me smile as I think of heaving my VT100 into the nearest
DECpond, but it doesn't give me a tool to solve the problem.
(But laughing does help, for stress especially!)
An approach that works for some people, and has worked somewhat for
me, is psychotherapy. "Stress" is a vague word that came into vogue
only recently, and may reflect a set of symptoms caused by things
going on in your life that you hadn't thought about.
I resisted therapy for many years, feeling that I would know about
any problems that I did have, and if I uncovered a new one, just
knowing about it would magically solve it. Intellectualization!
My neuropsychologist also resisted starting therapy with me; he
prefers to do testing and evaluation only, and let others (MDs)
work on the patients, primarily with drugs. However, he made an
exception in my case because he said I was suicidal. (I didn't
FEEL like I was going to kill myself, but his reply was that there
are many ways to be self-destructive -- and certainly stress can
be a manifestation of this kind of mind/body/life.)
I must get ahold of those articles mentioned in .9 -- enhancing or
limiting neurotransmitter function with drugs is gaining ground. For
example, a stressy thing that happens to me is sensory overload,
where I just can't stand all the sounds around me and have to go
somplace more quiet. This could be related to seizures, where the
brain's electrical patterns don't die out normally but keep on
running and spreading. Don't like to think about drugs? Me neither,
but I don't want brain surgery, and I can't feed my family if I
move to the nice quiet forest glen that keeps calling me (quietly).
And speaking of the effects of chemicals on your body, don't forget
the air-handling system at your place of employment. Even if an
independent consulting company comes and tests your air and declares
that everything's within normal limits (as happened in CXO3), it
may still be making you sick (as happens in CXO3). From time to
time peculiar smells come wafting through (there won't be any when
the testers come, though) and you'll get headaches. At other times,
you may notice people getting unexpectedly grumpy or tired or other-
wise stressed and have no clue as to why it's happening, but you'll
be suspicious ....
(There have also been links suggested between flourescent-lights-
or-video-terminals and stress-or-the-jitters.)
Something else my shrink picked up on, that's mentioned in .4:
diversion. Usually I feel like I'm not ready for the world when I
first get up, and reading helps. I don't think I ever remember
what I'm reading, but it gives me something to focus on and drowns
out the hectic, rambling thoughts. A popular analogy in meditation
is the dog barking outside your window -- a mantra is like throwing
it a bone to shut it up. For sure, thoughts that won't slow down
are stressful to me. Sometimes it shows up as worrying about things
that may not come to pass, or not being able to put to rest one of
the day's events. If you present these symptoms to a doctor, s/he'll
likely say that you're just under a lot of stress. Yes, but ....
And a volatile work situation certainly causes stress, as mentioned
in .3 -- I've been in an exactly similar situation for 3 years.
Nearly two years ago CXO had a murder/suicide, and the incredible
stress of working for DEC was mentioned. We're the largest private
employer in Colroado Springs, and the therapists say our employees
are represented disproportionately in their caseloads.
One of the societal winds blowing our corporate ship around is the
"softness" of the marketplace. DEC, along with other surviving
electronics manufacturers, is making major philosophical shifts in
the way it runs its business. This is a definite stressor.
Used to be, computer companies could be virtual half-way houses for
people who were rather poorly adjusted to society at large, but could
be very successful as long as they were allowed to follow their im-
pulsive, creative desires.
Don't take this as a literal example, but I can remember an article
in Newsweek, maybe, noting that a Silicon Valley company had free
pop instead of free coffee for employees. This is illustrative of
employees whose work habits and lifestyles are at variance with the
norm, as an academic might carefully put it.
Well, times have changed. Our success on Wall Street comes from
looking like a well-managed company with greatly increased fiscal
responsibility. I think quality-of-life is going to be reduced in
importance as a corporate goal in favor of more tangible "metrics."
Employees also feel stressed because there's more competition for
their jobs thanks to the companies that are laying off (like AT&T and
the Bell companies, besides all the folding electronics firms).
And you have fewer options -- job-hopping is discouraged with policy
changes such as doubling the time you have to spend in a job before
being considered for another. And you sometimes hear that "You're
lucky you work for DEC and still have a job." Hewlett-Packard used
to be the largest private employer in Colorado Springs, but economic
times have forced them to use unpaid days off and early retirement
bonuses so they don't break their "no-layoff" policy.
Final two points!
I'm glad nobody has spun off into the argument that stress is neutral,
neither good nor bad. In fact, some say, bodies NEED stress of a
certain variety, "eu-stress" (vs. "dis-stress"). This is semantic
sleight-of-hand that ignores what folks are really saying -- they
don't feel good and they want to know why.
There's also a theory that you go through a phase of feeling worse as
you're getting better, and this could be called stress too, I suppose.
I hope this helps. Some remedies, some perspective, and some
empathetic support -- good equation for hope and healing. Peace.
-- Ed
|
349.15 | get by with a little help... | THE780::BABCOCK | | Sat May 02 1987 18:47 | 22 |
| Good note. I think stress is a big factor in most of our lives.
Of all the difficult things I am trying to deal with now, the two
most stressfull are these;
1)Trying to be strong for everyone else. I am asking a lot
of other people, and feel I have no right to burden them with my
weakness and fear. I am always the supportive one. I get tired.
2) I move a lot, and am always among strangers. It is hard
to find someone to talk to.
I think one of the reasons our culture is so stressed out now is
that the traditional support groups like family, friends, community...
are no longer in place for many of us. We are left with no support
when things get ruff. Everyone needs a little help now and then,
but it can be hard to find.
Well back to looking for my bug (actually it is someone else's bug).
Noone can help me with that either.
Judy
|
349.16 | I'm no stranger than you are :^) | ORION::HERBERT | What a long strange trip its been! | Tue May 05 1987 16:55 | 67 |
| Re: .15
Yes, there don't seem to be as many support groups (friends, family,
etc.) as there used to be. However, *some* friends and family are
far from being supportive when you need them. Just as some strangers
can say something special, or offer kindness, that can brighten your
whole day.
I have come to find that people (like myself) who are normally strong
and supportive for other people, don't think they can get that
support in return when they need it. Perhaps that's because they
don't trust that others can fulfill that role...or because, as you
mentioned, they are surrounded by "strangers" when they need a friend.
[It is also valuable to note that we can avoid people, situations, and
states of mind that can help us...simply because we want to be upset.]
But to solve the problem of feeling friendless, perhaps we need to
change our perception of strangers (using wisdom, of course).
Our world is evolving and we can best benefit by evolving along with
it. We can see problems due to the dissolving family unit or lack
of close friends...or we can see this as a time to change our
perceptions and the way we relate with "strangers".
Besides, the world isn't as hostile as we think sometimes. For
instance, if someone came up to you, needing a friend or a helping
hand, would you give it to them? I think in most instances the
answer would be "yes". We all may live in different houses, and
act like we're not too interested in being overly friendly with
strangers, and we may be surprised or even scared if someone we don't
know starts carrying on a conversation with us, but somewhere within
us, I think most of us care about others and would help if we knew we
could. We're all the same. Strangers are just the ones we haven't
met yet. That doesn't make them any less helpful or caring.
I know this thing with strangers is a big taboo...but who cares?!...
we've successfully dissolved bigger taboos than this, much to
everybody's benefit!
To feel that we are burdens when we ask for help from someone else,
is a familiar feeling to choose since many of us were brought up "not
to impose". But many of our old familiar feelings and opinions are
not as valuable in this current day and age. By replacing them with
more appropriate flexible views for this rapidly changing world, we
can replace fear with understanding.
Would you want someone who really needed your help to not ask for it
because they didn't want to burden you? Most people get a lot of
satisfaction out of helping...so you could be bringing an opportunity
for them to feel good and worthwhile by helping you! Both parties
would benefit!
I've been through a hard time recently and I called on people more
than I ever have, or would have felt comfortable with in the past.
Sometimes it takes the really hard times to make people open up to
others. But maybe we can learn that we don't have to wait until a
time of crisis to see strangers as friends. I never knew that there
were so many people that would care about me. Brightens your whole
life, it does!! :^)
I'm feeling much better than I did when I started this note. Thanks
for letting me share my discoveries...
Jerri
"Strangers stopping strangers, just to shake their hand..."
(Nice thought! Stress reducer too!)
|
349.17 | Thank you | THE780::BABCOCK | | Tue May 05 1987 18:24 | 6 |
| re: 16
Thanks Jerri!! That note is a great help. You are right of course,
we just need the courage to reach out to others.
Judy
|
349.18 | just a thanks | MLFS1::DALPE | | Wed May 06 1987 09:44 | 15 |
| I think this note really points out why this is my favorite
notes file. Even though the title says dejavu it's really has
turned into a wonderful place to talk about all aspects of life.
And the friendship and support that goes on here is just great.
Over all everyone is open minded, inteligent, articulate.
What more can you ask for?
Now I've finally read every note and response in here and
I just wanted to thank you all for the enjoyment and enlightenment.
paul
|
349.19 | | MASTER::EPETERSON | | Thu May 07 1987 14:35 | 20 |
|
OK everyone, here is your chance to feel good about yourself and
reduce all that stress and help someone you don't know . . .
I don't know you, right??
. . . SO . . .
could you lend me five bucks???
-< :-D >-
But seriously, it does take courage to reach out when in need.
It is so much easier to give than receive. Especially if you feel
you have been burned (let down by someone who should have been there
for you) before.
Marion
|
349.20 | back to basics | VITAL::KEEFE | | Thu May 14 1987 09:24 | 49 |
| [This was in today's VNS issue, those who've already seen it may ]
[want to hit next/unseen....but then again, maybe it's worth reading]
[one more time. ]
ALL I EVER REALLY NEEDED TO KNOW
I LEARNED IN KINDERGARTEN
BY Robert Flughum
Seattle, Washington
Most of what I really need to know about how to live, and what to
do, and how to be, I learned in kindergarten. Wisdom was not at the
top of the graduate school mountain, but there in the sandbox at
nursery school.
These are the things I learned: Share everything. Play fair.
Don't hit people. Put things back where you found them. Clean up
your own mess. Don't take things that aren't yours. Say you're sorry
when you hurt somebody. Wash your hands before you eat. Flush. Warm
cookies and cold milk are good for you. Live a balanced life. Learn
some and think some and draw and paint and sing and dance and play and
work every day some.
Take a nap every afternoon. When you go out into the world, watch
for traffic, hold hands, and stick together. Be aware of wonder.
Remember the little seed in the plastic cup. The roots go down and
the plant goes up and nobody really knows how or why, but we are all
like that.
Goldfish and hamsters and white mice and even the little seed in
the plastic cup - they all die. So do we.
And then remember the book about Dick and Jane and the first word
you learned, the biggest word of all: LOOK. Everything you need to
know is in there somewhere. The Golden Rule and love and basic
sanitation. Ecology and politics and sane living.
Think of what a better world it would be if we all - the whole
world - had cookies and milk about 3 o'clock every afternoon and then
lay down with our blankets for a nap. Or if we had a basic policy in
our nation and other nations to always put things back where we found
them and cleaned up our own messes. And it is still true, no matter
how old you are, when you go out into the world, it is best to hold
hands and stick together.
(Note: The KANSAS CITY TIMES printed this kindergarten piece in an
issue last September. Since that time the author has received and
granted every one of the over 1,000 request to reprint it. )
|
349.21 | RELIEF? TM | MSDOA2::DUNN | | Thu May 14 1987 17:07 | 6 |
| Look up the Transcendental Meditation group in your town (under
Meditation in the phone book, usually). It's the best thing I've
ever found for dealing with the effects of stress because at the
same time it's neutralizing existing stress effects it also strengthens
you to resist the effects of future stresses, so you don't get bowled
over as easily in the future.
|
349.22 | Rub-a-dub-dub! | PUZZLE::GUEST_TMP | HOME, in spite of my ego! | Wed Jul 29 1987 23:08 | 25 |
| As a practicing massage therapist, I often encourage people
to reduce stress by sitting in a bath tub (if hot tub is not
available) with water (as hot as you can take it) and scents
(oils, flower extracts, etc.) Next, turn down the lights (or
turn them off) light a couple of candles, sit in the tub (naked,
of course) and "soak." Make sure you don't fall asleep (by sitting
in a position that discourages that or by using the services of
an intimate and trusted friend) and RELAX. Using music that for
you is relaxing is also very helpful. Thirty minutes or so of
this is quite soothing and stress-reducing and virtually everyone
can do it. No drugs are necessary and outside influences become
unnecessary, also. My body work is often used to help those who
are overly-stressed...the body does a "wonderful" job of revealing
it...and it, too, can be a useful tool. What becomes important,
however, is to find whatever the cause of the stress is and then
to release it, either by a change in attitude or a change in the
"cause." Stored stress is destructive "as hell" and has to be
released. I have been working on a video for some time which covers
some of this to some extent (superficially.) Perhaps if I finish
the project you will be able to utilize it someday. In any case,
there are many, many sources of stress-reduction methods and some
of the previous replies have hit upon them quite well.
Frederick
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349.23 | Stress Management and Related Workshops/Massach. | TNPUBS::MILGROM | | Sun Oct 27 1996 18:22 | 150
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