Reduce Stress with Diet and Exercise
For the reality is that there is very little you can do
about the stress in your life. What you can do something about, however, is how
you let it affect you. And the best place to start is with a bedrock of healthy
living. This strong foundation may help protect you against the harmful effects
of the chronic stress we all live with.
That means following a healthy lifestyle, particularly when
it comes to eating and exercising.
Eat Your Way to Calm
Here's how to do it:
Skip the simple sugars and starches (chips, cakes and ice
cream). The spike in blood sugar and insulin they cause, combined with your
already high cortisol levels, can lead you to eat more as well as put you at
risk of insulin insensitivity and diabetes. There's nothing wrong with reaching
for comfort food, but take the attributes of the "bad" comfort food -
creamy, crunchy, sweet - and try to find healthier alternatives.
Avoid coffee and other caffeinated food and drinks. They not
only increase levels of certain stress hormones, but also mimic their effects
in the body (increasing heart rate, for example).
Load up on vegetables and fruits and other high-fiber foods.
The nutrients they provide lend an extra dollop of protection against the
immune-sapping effects of chronic stress.
Choose complex carbohydrates. Their steady release of sugar
not only keeps your blood sugar levels steady, but also induces the brain to
release more of the mood-enhancing chemical serotonin.
Exercise
If I were to make a list of the studies showing the benefits
of exercise on reducing stress hormones, it would be longer than my arm. Simply
moving-walking, running, biking, swimming-changes the balance of stress
hormones in the brain.
Studies suggest that by making the body stronger and
healthier, exercise enhances your ability to respond to stress, thus thwarting
many of its negative effects such as anxiety, depression and heart disease.
Regular exercise also helps flush out the byproducts of the body's stress
response - those hundreds of chemicals released in response to a stressful
situation - enabling you to return to a normal state quicker.
Then there are the meditative benefits of exercise. There is
a "zone" you get into when you swim, or walk, or jog, an enhanced
feeling of self-esteem that results from doing something you know is good for
you and from seeing the physical results of that action, the social support if
you're working out with a friend, and even the fact that physical activity
improves your sleep.
It doesn't really matter what kind of exercise you do;
what's most important, studies find, is that you do something you enjoy, not
something you feel you simply have to do. Otherwise, you're just stressing
yourself out again!
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