5 techniques to avoid stress 😊✔️
As we get older, many find it difficult to relax. This is a natural development of breaking away from the daily work-life routine where stress, deadlines, and reporting to management has become ingrained from spending most of our adult life working. Therefore, it’s important to make a conscious effort to understand the dynamics of how to relax your mind and body, and to leave any stress behind.
This blog looks at 5 quick techniques to avoid stress.
1. Stay away from social media outlets
A huge cause of stress is any social media, whether it be your phone or Facebook account. Try to spend some time away from these things to help reduce your anxiety. Turn off your phone or leave it in your car for a bit so that you don’t run the temptation of obsessively checking it every few minutes.
Leave your laptop closed and turn off your desktop so that you are not tempted to check your online media accounts. If social media is a big enough stressor in your life, consider removing it entirely for a period. Deactivate your online social accounts for a few weeks or months until you feel that it will no longer cause a problem for you.
2. Don’t watch television
TV is full of bright colours, busy images, and constant noise which help to raise stress levels. Especially if you’re watching political shows or debates, as this will inevitably get the blood running hot.
3. Spend time alone
Often the people around us cause us the most anxiety, so make it a point to spend some time with just yourself. Take time off work to catch up on rest and alone time. Try taking a weekend retreat to a local town or nature reserve where you can have some time to think. Cancel plans with friends if you overwhelm yourself with a too-packed schedule. It is important to have time with just yourself before sharing it with others. Find time away from your family. It doesn’t matter how much you love them, everybody needs a bit of time separate from their family in order to keep a healthy mindset.
4. Avoid your known stressors
If you know that an upcoming test or meeting is what is causing your stress, try to spend time away from it to prevent additional anxiety.
Set firm boundaries for times in which you are willing to deal with these stressors, if they are work or school related. Promise yourself only to work on your homework until 8pm, after which you will spend time debriefing and letting go of stress. If a certain person or activity is responsible for your anxiety, avoid them for a bit. Spend time thinking about why that thing, in particular, bothers you so much, and a solution to the problem.
5. If it doesn’t feel good, then don’t do it
The key in retirement is to enjoy your life. Just because you have developed an activity list does not mean that you necessarily need to do all of those activities. If some of those things on your list no longer interest you, then drop them and find other things that are more engaging. No one says that you have to do the activities on the list. There are many things that can be fun and challenging in retirement. Your retirement list is a guide – it is not a bunch of requirements that you need to check off. If something becomes uninteresting, then get rid of it and find something new. In retirement, you are only responsible to yourself.
Source:
– wikiHow, How to Relax Your Mind. Read article
Read more about staying relaxed after 60
Volume four will help you identify any underlying stresses or anxiety levels dormant from working life, and provide remedies to improve peace, relaxation, healthy habits as well as offer alternatives to the normal. Improving or maintaining an active memory is an important part of aging, which is why we uncover some key causes, quick tips and techniques to engage healthy cognitive brain. Read more on Volume Four.
Volume 4 is titled “Relax your mind + Boost your memory”, comprising 47 pages the volume covers two distinct chapters on Staying relaxed after 60 and Techniques to keeping your memory active.
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