Part 4: 12 Accessible, Achievable Tips To Relieve Stress

We all know the benefits of exercise. If you’ve read any of my articles on adopting an achievable exercise program that works, you already know it trumps food as the number one way to increase longevity, lose or maintain weight, and combat disease. Exercise is good. Really good.But in our over-stressed, “always doing” society, we turn the benefits of exercise into a double-edged sword. Doing only intense cardio or high intensity training can force your body into a state of being over-stressed and unable to function normally, repairing itself as is intended.In this series on stress, we have seen these negative effects on three women, Janene, Kim, and Lisa and how the stress in their lives is actually causing their well-intentioned exercise programs to backfire. (You can read parts 1, 2, and 3 here.) Maybe you see yourself or parts of you in one or all of them.Thirty minutes a day is the recipe for success for all of us, but be mindful of the type and intensity of your preferred method and take stock of your stress. You can scale back to mobility or a Flow for a few days before you jump back into high-intensity work.One sure way to know if your cortisol levels are too high too long is to get them checked by a medical doctor who will do a salivary cortisol test, not a regular lab test. Also, is your energy level very low in the morning and seems to increase around bedtime? Then your cortisol is probably off kilter.Below I’m offering a solution. It’s never too late.

There are only two ways to live your life. One as though nothing is a miracle.The other is as though everything is a miracle.– Albert Einstein

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1. Learn how to breathe.

We breathe 16 breaths per minute. This means we breathe about 960 breaths an hour, 23,040 breaths a day, 8,409,600 a year. If we cut this short with neck or chest breathing, or by holding our breath thereby unconsciously robbing our body of essential oxygen-producing breaths, repair and recovery is nearly impossible. Breathing is believed to be the top rehabilitation program.

 

2. Take regular planned breaks from intense training.

Give your body the break it needs for recovery, muscle building, and fat burning. “Rest” is not a bad word. It’s when you burn FAT!

 

3. Stop multi-tasking.

Our brains are not computers. They operate best with one activity and thought at a time.

 

4. Get sufficient and quality sleep.

Turn your bedtime into your most important appointment of the day. When we sleep, we burn fat and build muscle. That should be enough reason! ;-)

 

5. Learn to meditate.

There a several great apps out there to use. HeartMath is one of my favorites. Meditation has been proven to reduce the level of stress hormones and makes you more focused. Better yet, check out “compassion meditation.”

 

6. Consume your calories from non-processed sources.

Sugar can exacerbate any stressed-out system.

 

7. Take a digital vacation.

Not only does the blue light kill your sleep pattern, our devices do a number on our shoulders, necks, elbows, and hands.

 

8. Embrace silence.

It increases your brain’s capacity.

 

9. Ditch negative self-talk.

It takes 20 positive thoughts to erase a negative one!

 

10. Practice gratefulness and discover joy.

Studies show it works!

11. Get a pet.

Pet owners have less stress than others.

 

12. Learn how to practice mobility and flexibility drills

And use to complement your workouts. If you are a runner, open up those hips. If you are a mountain climber, get those shoulder in tip-top shape.

 As with anything, the all or nothing approach never works. Start today with one or two of the and embrace them as part of the new YOU. 

Adrien Cotton

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ADRIEN COTTON believes the greatest gift you can give to yourself is the gift of wellness.

After serving in high-leverage professional roles, including being one of the youngest Communications Directors in the US House of Representatives, Adrien pivoted her career focus to helping clients capture their strength in all areas of life. An accomplished speaker, entrepreneur, corporate wellness educator, menopause expert, and wellness coach, Adrien has proven success in designing and implementing innovative wellness programs. 

With a Master’s in Public Policy from Georgetown University, Adrien sharpened her professional skills by working with individuals from all walks of life. This unique background allows her to tailor her services for each and every client, with optimization and long-lasting success as the goal. Her effectiveness is rooted in a solid foundation of growth-oriented principles, a proven history of helping clients transform their lives, and a deep level of relatability gained from her personal wellness journey.

Since founding her wellness enterprise, Adrien leverages her fitness and wellness background to guide people from a state of giving up to a place of proactive self-care. Her work extends beyond nutrition and exercise, emphasizing lifestyle and high-impact areas of focus visually represented in her Wellness Wheel. Incorporating strategies in stress resilience, sleep, calendar management, mindfulness, and menopause, she’s helped transform hundreds of lives.

Adrien is living her mission to support clients in shifting their mindsets and helping them leverage small habits that yield lasting results.

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