Home Stress Management  

A Free Stress Management Tip You Can Implement Right Now...





Stress management is essential in today's world, if not vital to your health and well being.
 

Many people go through their days not aware of the high stress levels in their lives. They might think, "Well, how serious can it be if I don't even know it exists?"

Regardless of how little or how much stress you have in your life, being able to identify it will be a big help to you. Once you are able to identify the stress in your life for what it is, you can then go about the business of dealing with it more effectively.

Make no mistake about it - if there is stress in your life, chances are you are reacting negatively to at least some of it. Keeping a stress diary is a quick, easy way to manage your stress levels and keep things stress free in your home.

When you commit to keeping a Stress Diary, you gain important insight into how you react to stress. This allows you to better channel your energy into performing as you choose to and not as the result of the unidentified stress that has a foothold in your life.

You will begin by recording, each day, information about the stresses you are experiencing. Your goal will be to analyze these stresses and then better manage them.

Here is an example of a day one entry:

. Woke up late (alarm did not go off) . Got the kids off to school in an awful rush, very cranky . Arrived to work without any breakfast, feeling like a zombie . Short-tempered with co-workers all day . Picked up kids from school and nearly bit their heads off . Locked myself in my room. . Stayed in room entire night, sleeping and watching TV, had a bath

Your Stress Diary will better help you to understand:

> What causes your stress in more detail? > Level of stress that you operate at most efficiently > How do you react to stress? Are your reactions appropriate and useful?

When you write your Stress Diary each day, you will gain valuable insight that will help you to manage stress more proactively.

So that you can best analyze your stress, include the following information:

*Date and time of each entry

*How do you feel right now? On a scale of 1 - 10 with 1 being miserable and 10 being ecstatic

*Record your mood on a scale of 1 - 10 with 1 being low and 10 being very happy

*Record how effective you feel you are on a scale of 1 - 10 with 1 being very ineffective and 10 being highly effective

*How stressed out do you feel? On a scale of 1 - 10 with 1 being in a Zen state and 10 feeling like you are crawling out of your skin

*What stress symptom do you feel?

*How did you handle the stress?

Commit to making daily entries into your diary over a reasonable period of time. After a period of about 4 weeks, you should be able to start to see patterns.

Some of your behaviors which are provoked by stress will be repeated on a regular basis. Make a list of those behaviors that you see most often. These will be the stressors in your daily life you will want to learn to control first.

Next, look at the causes of these obvious stressors. Also, look at how well you managed them on a day-by-day basis. When you can identify areas where you can learn to manage your stress responses better, list those.

List all of the every day events of your life that cause you stress and list how these events made you feel.

By now you can see the contrast in what events cause you the most stress compared to what events cause you the least. You can now see at what stress level you can function best.

Your goal now will be to lessen the stress in your life by managing how you deal with stressful situations and you can do this by responding to the stress in your life in a more proactive/positive manner.

 

 

 



McPherson, Illinois, Pasadena, Milpitas, Painesville, Chicago Ridge, Morton Grove, Kenmore, Farmington, Jamestown, Hoover, Lebanon, Sylacauga, Canton, Grand Forks, West Lafayette, Gatesville, Pompton Lakes, Wisconsin, Florida, Hammond, Carthage, Natchitoches, Portage, Stanton, Soledad, West Covina, Goleta, Madison Heights, Ecorse, Pacifica, Guam, Moreno Valley, Calabasas, Thousand Oaks, Brighton, Cudahy, Hawaiian Gardens, Newport Beach, Apple Valley, Kaysville, Shoreview, Rochester Hills, New Mexico, Chambersburg, Daphne, Burton, Hurst, Atlanta, Matteson, East Bethel, Smithfield, Menlo Park, Princeton, Hoboken, Greenwood, Salisbury, Broken Arrow, Burbank, Zionsville, Colonial Heights, New Jersey, Des Moines, Socorro, Waco, Safety Harbor, Santa Maria, Lake Forest, Carpinteria, Ridgeland, Ferguson, Colorado, Thibodaux, Clovis, Rockville Centre, Louisiana, Anoka, Wisconsin Rapids, Hillsdale, Indiana, Lake Charles, Pueblo, Dover, Missouri, Dalton, Midvale, North Little Rock, Crystal Lake, Honolulu CDP, Lake Forest Park, Mississippi, North Ogden

Comments page 0 of 0
Click here to add a comment
There are currently 0 comments to display.

 

Four Stress Management Strategies Guarantee to Improve Your Health

By Leon Lioe
Stress is always around us and part of out life, threatening to ruin us. You can't eliminate stress completely but you can learn how to manage it. This article gives you four stress management strategies for improving your health.
[READ FULL ARTICLE]

Yoga and Stress Management - Four Barriers to Reducing Stress

By Ntathu Allen
Yoga exercises and relaxation techniques are the best ways to reduce and manage stress. If you are a solo-entrepreneur, a parent with small or teenage children or in charge of a busy team at work then your day can be full of frustration and stress.
[READ FULL ARTICLE]

Family Money Management and Stress Management With a Realistic Budget

By Rick H. Carter
A major and consistent source of stress for most people is money. Well, actually the stress is caused by spending more money than they bring in or have. The answer to this is simple: spend less. Yeah, and the answer to losing weight is spend more calories than you eat. So let's come up with a plan for realistic family money management and hopefully get rid of some of that stress with a realistic budget.
[READ FULL ARTICLE]

Stress Management - Dealing With Anxiety Vs Fear

By Beth Griffith
You hear a lot about "stress" and "stress management" these days but did you ever stop to wonder, what is stress? We could define stress as an internal alarm state triggered by a perceived threat. That's a fancy way of saying that when you're scared, you tense up.
[READ FULL ARTICLE]