Learn how to
control stress
What’s causing your stress?
A slow buildup of everyday annoyances:
a dead car battery, traffic jam, buttons that pop off your clothes
as you are going to
an important meeting. It’s
the little things that get under your skin
Is it a tight schedule and seemingly
insurmountable problems? Bills to pay, a boss to please, a colicky
baby to pacify?
Juggling many roles is a main
cause of stress.
Maybe it’s positive and
negative life changes, from the joy of a wedding to the loss of
a spouse, from the exhilaration of a job promotion to sadness
at moving away from old friends.
Perhaps the cause of your stress
is inner conflict. Anger with your boss actually may be old anger
against a parent bubbling
to the surface. If
you can recognize
a pattern from the past, this can be an instant stress reliever. Take
some time, even just 30 seconds and write down your feelings.
What you need to do is relax.
Huh? It can’t be that simple! Yes, it can
and you can do it. No, we can’t control other people and situations.
What you can do is control how you respond to people and events.
What you have done is to give
away control to others. What you need to do is regain that control,
seal it up and only let
the twins out
when
it’s
really necessary.
When was the last time you actually
relaxed? Can you remember what it was like? Were you calm and collected?
Was your breathing
normal?
Were
your
muscles loose?
And, did you feel that way without any outside stimulants like
drugs? If so, the good news is that you can restore that
same feeling at
will. Yes,
you can
definitely take it back whenever or wherever you choose.
When your mind is bypassing the
chemical twins and sending truly relaxing messages to your body,
wonderful things begin to happen.
Just as the
chemical twins
jump to attention when you stress, other chemicals go to work when
you relax causing you to have a feeling of contentment.
While relaxing, actions taken
by people and external events are still important but not necessarily
personal. You are able to
discern that
no one is launching
a direct attack upon you or anyone or anything of yours.
Small problems remain small problems
and not the woolly mammoth charging down upon you. Large events
will become smaller and
not cause you
to get out of
your car during gridlock and shout obscenities to the drivers
in front of you.
Those people who are horrible
and annoying, shrink to a caricature serving up no more significance
in your world than an ant
on a picnic table.
As you continue your journey toward relaxation, you can watch
these people with
amusement. When you reach the point of total relaxati
on you
are able to
see your world
as it is, not for how you feel about it.Everything you
do is a matter of choice. You choose to be angry, happy
or indifferent.
You make a conscious choice
to take action
or not to
take action.
\On the opposite end of the spectrum
are the chemical twins controlling what you know is stress and
you are bumped,
pushed and thrown
into chaos. No choice
and no idea why you don’t have a choice.
Obviously, relaxing is a good
thing because it gives you choice. It puts you back in the driver's
seat
instead of
the chemical
twins.
So relax already! Sure, just
like that.
Do you remember tormenting your
neighbor's cat as a child? You had the upper hand until kitty fought
back. You’d step away from the torment
and probably forget all about it until the next
time you scratched. It took a few lessons,
but pretty soon you understood if you tormented
the cat, the cat would fight back. So you stopped.
That was a conscious action taken to prevent
being hurt.
It was a survival strategy just like fight or
flight, except that this was behavior modification
instead of an automatic response.
As you grew older, the behavior
for survival changed but the bottom line is that you probably
used a
dozen behaviors
without
even thinking
about
it every
day of the week. The one behavior that you
probably overlooked is the most important one of all,
the behavior to relax.
If relaxation is just another
behavior, then that means it’s a learned
response. And, if that is the case you are
able to change the behavior. Chances are you were never taught
how to do that, which is why you are reading this
in the first place.
You have to teach your brain
how to do it. Actually, your brain already knows how subconsciously,
but you need to
teach it
how to do it consciously.
In
order to do that, you need an understanding
of
how your mind works.
Everything you have ever encountered
or done in your entire lifetime is permanently
recorded in
your subconscious
mind.
Most of it
is not remembered
consciously.
If I ask you, “How much is two and
two,” you will immediately answer, “four.” That
was from your conscious memory. But if
I ask you what you had for dinner ten years
ago tonight, it will more than like be
impossible for you to consciously
remember it at all. However, your subconscious
remembers it in great detail.
When you drive your car, you
are probably thinking about all kinds of things other
than driving
the car. Your
subconscious, through
habit, is controlling
all your driving actions. You just automatically
arrive at your destination without giving
it detailed conscious
thought.
You don’t have to think “push
the brake” or “ease up
on the gas pedal.” You do it
all automatically, controlled by your
subconscious. Your subconscious is
designed to protect you. It controls
all body functions.
If you are cold in the night, it awakens
you. If you need to go to the bathroom,
it awakens you also. It controls your
heartbeat and all other involuntary
functions of the body.
Your subconscious doesn’t
rationalize; it doesn’t ask questions,
doesn’t know truth from falsehood.
It merely acts upon whatever information
is stored within.
There are actually four states
of consciousness, but for our purposes
we will be dealing
with just two:
Beta – this is
our waking state
Alpha – first step to the subconscious