Something is Wrong – Anxiety Disorder, Panic Attacks, & Depression

Anxiety disorder, panic attacks & depression are a sign that something is wrong. Something needs to be amended in your life.

It could be your home environment, your work environment, relationships or an illness causing your anxiety, panic attacks & depression. Or even more likely a combination of several things in your life.

Either way, your body is screaming for a change and it’s not always so simple that you change these things all in a day, nor would I recommend you make such massive changes in just one day

However, if you are having one of those days, where you feel that if something doesn’t change, if something different doesn’t happen you’re just going to explode… There are other little simple changes you can make to give you some relief.

This is what I used to do (and sometimes still do if I feel like I am stuck in a rut and feeling fed up with everything going on around me and in my life).

Make subtle changes for that day!

I liked to re-arrange my furniture. This way, I felt there was a change in my life, I could see it! And everything didn’t feel so much the same anymore.

I spend a lot of time in my lounge room… so I would come up with an action plan of where I could move the couches, the tv, book cases, stereo and make it look very different!

In affect, I felt like things were now somewhat different and this gave me some relief.

Try this on the area or room you spend a lot of time in. Whether it’s your office, your bedroom, lounge room, the backyard… make a simple change.

Although this is just a temporary fix on your emotional state, it buys you the time you need to prepare for the bigger changes in your life.

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Author: Joanne King

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Anxiety & Panic Attack Symptoms FAQ

Having an intense, irrational fear or sense of impending doom only begins to describe the illnesses known as Anxiety disorders. Some of the symptoms you may feel include:

o You feel your heart start to pound.

o You begin to feel dizzy or faint.

o You feel nausea or smothering sensations.

o You feel tingling or numbness.

o You start to feel pressure in your chest.

o You experience shortness of breath.

o You think you may be dying or having a heart attack.

o You think you may be going crazy.

According to NIMH, “Anxiety Disorders affect about 40 million American adults age 18 years and older (about 18%) in a given year… Unlike the relatively mild, brief anxiety caused by a stressful event (such as speaking in public or a first date), anxiety disorders last at least 6 months and can get worse if they are not treated.” Source: http://www.nimh.nih.gov/publicat/anxiety.cfm

Keep in mind, that doesn’t include all the children and adolescents who also develop this disorder early in life. Many go untreated simply because their symptoms are written off as “growing pains”. You may be surprised to know that scientists believe there may be a genetic link to these symptoms: “The tendency to develop panic attacks appears to be inherited.” Source: http://www.nimh.nih.gov/publicat/anxiety.cfm#3.

It’s common for people with Anxiety Disorders to have other problems like Depression, Substance Abuse, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, Agoraphobia and other mental or physical illnesses. Many times, these other illnesses need to be treated first, before people will respond to any treatment for Anxiety Disorder.

I’ve worked with people that have struggled with these symptoms. Some have actually had to quit working because they could not cope with the stresses of their attacks at the workplace. Others have managed to deal with them without becoming house-bound, but still have “episodes”. A few even told me they have them while they were sleeping, and woke up with all the symptoms described above.

I’ve had my own challenges with these symptoms, and I can tell you that if you have them, too, you’re NOT going crazy. While some of my friends INSIST I am crazy, it has nothing to do with anxiety or panic attack symptoms! I’ve also learned some effective ways to deal with this, and I encourage you to visit my blog for more information, tips and methods for rising above the symptoms of anxiety and panic attacks.

You can learn how to successfully deal with anxiety and panic attack symptoms. You dont have to suffer needlessly! Get free information and ways to cope with your Anxiety And Panic Attack Symptoms NOW at http://anxiety-panic-attack-symptoms.blogspot.com/, a resource for anyone who has (or knows someone who has) Anxiety and Panic Attacks.

Author: Vince Runza

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Natural Treatment For Stress & Anxiety – Cardiovascular Exercises

The cardiovascular exercises consist of extreme strenuous routines, which are aimed to get your heart pumping hard to burn calories and bust out stress from your system. Some common cardiovascular exercises are aerobics, hard running, elliptical machine exercises, walking briskly, and stair stepping and cycling among others. If you are worried about your knees, you could choose the treadmill and/or the elliptical machine, which is not as harsh on the joints, but just as effective.

For best effect, the cardiovascular exercises need to be performed in the morning before your breakfast. Because of the strenuous nature of the exercise, there would a flood of endorphins into your blood, which would mean you would stay happy and positively energized throughout the day. What better way to fight anxiety than this?

The cardios as these exercises are otherwise known increase your metabolic rate and burn a huge number of calories while side by side releases stress from your system. With stress out, there is little or no scope for anxiety attacks. Gradually you will find that the symptoms of anxiety have abated and after a while completely disappear. This is an exceptional antidote for the time when you feel an anxiety attack building up within you. A couple of days with cardiovascular exercises, and your anxiety attack will be long forgotten.

Remember, never to do cardios after food or before bedtime. These exercises are meant to wake your system up and eliminate fatigue from the body. Therefore, these are best done in the morning on an empty stomach as mentioned earlier.

When you consider that stress is the root-cause of most of the modern day diseases including anxiety and depression, exercise is the universal antidote. The Holy Bible said that in order to live a long and good life, man (to be read as human beings) would need to have the sweat from his brow drop on his feet. In other words, the Good Book says that human beings need to stay active not only mentally, but also physically. Modern medical science advocates the same thing.

We do not have much to do physically today thanks to the advancement in technology. However, we are forewarned that without exercise our bodies would fall into a condition of irreparable damage.

Use exercises to fight dissolve stress and control anxiety and depression. The day you allow exercise in your life, anxiety would take your leave.

Click Here to grab your FREE Stress Relief Manifesto Report. It’d show you how you can achieve inner calm and eliminate stress from your life forever. For more information on dealing with anxiety, panic attacks and stress. Visit the anxiety help blog today.

Author: Ian J Spencer

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How Stress Can Ruin Your Body

Everybody knows what stress is and we all think that the level of stress in our daily lives is incessantly on the rise. This is almost certainly true as well. However, stress can be a double-edged sword, stress causes stress, which means that being stressed is a vicious spiral. Stress ever creating more stress.

Our bodies can deal with a great amount of stress and so can our minds, but if stress levels are allowed to continue to rise unchecked, something will break. It might be your sense of mental equilibrium, in other words, you may get ratty or it may be your body. The biggest organ of our bodies is our skin and so it would not be surprising if excess stress caused skin problems.

This is in spite of the fact that most peoples’ bodies last out quite well for sixty or seventy years. However, untreated stress can be pernicious, as I said before. Stress creates more stress and in this way, if the way your body complains about the amount of stress it is under is by breaking out in spots, pimples or acnes, then that can lead to more stress, which can make the break-out even worse.

Additionally, the fact is that it is typically teenagers who get acne, while they are going through stressful physical and emotional changes due to hormones. At this vulnerable age, when teenagers are beginning to discover their sexuality, the last thing they want is acne. This might even cause acne, which results in more stress, which does not help the acne fade away ad infinitum.

There are many possible reasons for acne, but there is also proof that Rosacea tends to get better and worse depending on our stress levels. Therefore, you might decide to try stress management as part of your acne or pimple control routine.

It is not probable that stress management alone will rid you of acne and other skin problems, but there is a very good case for including stress management in your endeavor to keep your skin problems in check.

Along with stress management, you will need to try all the other suggested methods, such as reducing fat in your diet, eating more fruit and vegetables, keeping your hair off your face and changing your pillow slip every night.

If you think that stress might be contributing to your acne, then you ought to follow a de-stressing routine, which could include altering your diet (in the same way as mentioned above); exercising more; learning relaxation techniques, like deep breathing or yoga; taking a massage or sauna and pampering yourself a little, possibly while listening to soothing music.

Other ways of reducing stress involve reducing chaos in your life and setting goals for yourself. Stress often rises when we feel that we are no longer in control, so budget your finances and plan your routines. Stress can also increase if we feel that we are ‘not getting anywhere’, so learn to reward yourself for achieving goals that you set for yourself. These can be as simple, small or large as you like, but I find that small rewards for attaining short term targets works best for me.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on many subjects, but is presently concerned with the symptoms of stress. If you are suffering from any kind of stress, please go over to our website now at Stress and Heart Disease

Author: Owen Jones

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Stress and Drinking

Stress is something all of us experience. Most people stress out over their jobs and some stress out over their home lives. Whatever causes the stress, most people don’t deal with it very well; and for good reason. Stress makes you feel all wound up. You just can’t relax. You fidget and your mind races. If you’re stressed out about your relationship, for example, you may dream up all kinds of worse case scenarios that stress you out even more.

That’s essentially stress causing stress, and the cycle continues. And that’s exactly what happens. You feel stressed about one part of your life and soon that stress bleeds into other parts of your life. Your stress feeds off of itself and gets bigger. This can lead a person to do anything they can think of to relieve that stress. Some turn to positive activities like hobbies and reading and watching movies; anything to escape the reality of their lives. And then there are those that turn to alcohol. Alcohol, however, may not be the best solution to ridding your life of that stress that makes life almost unbearable.

Numbs the Senses

Alcohol numbs certain senses. Hearing, for example, is impaired. You will talk at your loudest voice to someone standing directly in front of you when you’ve been drinking. Your coordination is off and you, as it’s always been said, ‘feel no pain’. In times of war before morphine, soldiers were given whiskey or some other alcoholic beverage in order to ease the pain of having a limb amputated or a bullet extracted from their bodies. But alcohol numbs you in another way, too. That stress and anxiety and panic like feelings, and that weight that’s constantly on your shoulders; all of it just melts away. You are able to laugh and have a good time and nothing else matters. You are no longer stressed, and that’s why so many people turn to alcohol when they’re super stressed. However, there are downsides to using alcohol to numb stress.

The Next Day

Numbing stress with alcohol only lasts so long. The next day you have to deal with hangovers and possibly missing work; or at least performing poorly at work. And that stress you didn’t feel the night before when you were pounding down alcohol like it was water, it’s still there. And you’re adding to the stress by potentially making your life more difficult due to the after affects of overusing alcohol.

Now, if you use alcohol responsibly, you can ease stress at times when you are only occasionally stressed. However, alcohol is not the answer when it comes to stress. If you’re constantly stressed, you’re going to be constantly drunk. That’s dangerous for you and for others. Instead, find the source of the stress and try to deal with it head on without the use of any foreign substances such as beer, whiskey or whatever your poison may be.

Click here for more information on stress relief or go to http://www.stressdr.com

Thank you,
Wendy Duncan

Author: Wendy Rose Duncan

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Anxiety & Panic Attack Symptoms FAQ

Having an intense, irrational fear or sense of impending doom only begins to describe the illnesses known as Anxiety disorders. Some of the symptoms you may feel include:

o You feel your heart start to pound.

o You begin to feel dizzy or faint.

o You feel nausea or smothering sensations.

o You feel tingling or numbness.

o You start to feel pressure in your chest.

o You experience shortness of breath.

o You think you may be dying or having a heart attack.

o You think you may be going crazy.

According to NIMH, “Anxiety Disorders affect about 40 million American adults age 18 years and older (about 18%) in a given year… Unlike the relatively mild, brief anxiety caused by a stressful event (such as speaking in public or a first date), anxiety disorders last at least 6 months and can get worse if they are not treated.” Source: http://www.nimh.nih.gov/publicat/anxiety.cfm

Keep in mind, that doesn’t include all the children and adolescents who also develop this disorder early in life. Many go untreated simply because their symptoms are written off as “growing pains”. You may be surprised to know that scientists believe there may be a genetic link to these symptoms: “The tendency to develop panic attacks appears to be inherited.” Source: http://www.nimh.nih.gov/publicat/anxiety.cfm#3.

It’s common for people with Anxiety Disorders to have other problems like Depression, Substance Abuse, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, Agoraphobia and other mental or physical illnesses. Many times, these other illnesses need to be treated first, before people will respond to any treatment for Anxiety Disorder.

I’ve worked with people that have struggled with these symptoms. Some have actually had to quit working because they could not cope with the stresses of their attacks at the workplace. Others have managed to deal with them without becoming house-bound, but still have “episodes”. A few even told me they have them while they were sleeping, and woke up with all the symptoms described above.

I’ve had my own challenges with these symptoms, and I can tell you that if you have them, too, you’re NOT going crazy. While some of my friends INSIST I am crazy, it has nothing to do with anxiety or panic attack symptoms! I’ve also learned some effective ways to deal with this, and I encourage you to visit my blog for more information, tips and methods for rising above the symptoms of anxiety and panic attacks.

You can learn how to successfully deal with anxiety and panic attack symptoms. You dont have to suffer needlessly! Get free information and ways to cope with your Anxiety And Panic Attack Symptoms NOW at http://anxiety-panic-attack-symptoms.blogspot.com/, a resource for anyone who has (or knows someone who has) Anxiety and Panic Attacks.

Author: Vince Runza

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Natural Treatment For Stress & Anxiety – Cardiovascular Exercises

The cardiovascular exercises consist of extreme strenuous routines, which are aimed to get your heart pumping hard to burn calories and bust out stress from your system. Some common cardiovascular exercises are aerobics, hard running, elliptical machine exercises, walking briskly, and stair stepping and cycling among others. If you are worried about your knees, you could choose the treadmill and/or the elliptical machine, which is not as harsh on the joints, but just as effective.

For best effect, the cardiovascular exercises need to be performed in the morning before your breakfast. Because of the strenuous nature of the exercise, there would a flood of endorphins into your blood, which would mean you would stay happy and positively energized throughout the day. What better way to fight anxiety than this?

The cardios as these exercises are otherwise known increase your metabolic rate and burn a huge number of calories while side by side releases stress from your system. With stress out, there is little or no scope for anxiety attacks. Gradually you will find that the symptoms of anxiety have abated and after a while completely disappear. This is an exceptional antidote for the time when you feel an anxiety attack building up within you. A couple of days with cardiovascular exercises, and your anxiety attack will be long forgotten.

Remember, never to do cardios after food or before bedtime. These exercises are meant to wake your system up and eliminate fatigue from the body. Therefore, these are best done in the morning on an empty stomach as mentioned earlier.

When you consider that stress is the root-cause of most of the modern day diseases including anxiety and depression, exercise is the universal antidote. The Holy Bible said that in order to live a long and good life, man (to be read as human beings) would need to have the sweat from his brow drop on his feet. In other words, the Good Book says that human beings need to stay active not only mentally, but also physically. Modern medical science advocates the same thing.

We do not have much to do physically today thanks to the advancement in technology. However, we are forewarned that without exercise our bodies would fall into a condition of irreparable damage.

Use exercises to fight dissolve stress and control anxiety and depression. The day you allow exercise in your life, anxiety would take your leave.

Click Here to grab your FREE Stress Relief Manifesto Report. It’d show you how you can achieve inner calm and eliminate stress from your life forever. For more information on dealing with anxiety, panic attacks and stress. Visit the anxiety help blog today.

Author: Ian J Spencer

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Ways to Deal With the Stress of Tax Day

With the looming IRS tax deadline on April 15th, many Americans are experiencing financial stressors and may be dealing with them in unhealthy ways. Stress related to tax deadlines can increase reliance on the unhealthy behaviors a lot of people already use to cope with everyday stressors related to money, work, personal and family health matters and raising children. Increased reliance on unhealthy behaviors to manage stress can lead to long-term, serious health problems.

When you cope with stress in unhealthy ways, you may alleviate symptoms of stress in the short term, but you end up creating significant personal health problems over time, which, ironically, creates more stress. If you identify specific times of the year, such as tax season, that cause increased stress in your life, you can take a proactive approach to stress management. During such high stress periods you can be especially conscious of engaging in healthier coping behaviors.

A 2009 survey by the American Psychological Association found that money and the economy are the top sources of stress for adults. For many, these interrelated issues become emphasized during tax season. The survey also found that, overall, people engage in unhealthy behaviors, such as eating to alleviate stress. They attempt to manage financial and other life stressors by making poor diet choices, smoking, and drinking.

Here are some more adaptive strategies you can use to manage financial stress:

* Become aware of patterns of stress in your life.
* Everyone experiences stress differently. How do you identify stress when it occurs? Do you notice greater stress during tax filing season or when making financial decisions?
* Identify money stressors.
* What events or situations trigger stressful feelings? Are they related to meeting tax deadlines, paying bills, financial responsibilities, or money decisions?
* Recognize how you deal with financial stress.

Some people deal with stress by using unhealthy behaviors such as smoking, drinking or over/under eating. Determine if you are using those types of unhealthy behaviors to cope with financial related stress. Is this a behavior you rely on year-round, or is it specific to tax filing deadlines or other money decisions?

Notice if the ways you deal with stress in general create financial stress for you. Do you turn to unhealthy financial behaviors such as overspending, misuse of credit cards, neglecting bills or constantly borrowing money in an effort to deal with other stressors in your life, only to create financial stress down the line?

Understand what money means to you. Money can be symbolic of emotional issues that may seem unrelated to your personal finances. Becoming aware of these underlying emotional issues empowers you to deal with them. By addressing and resolving these issues, you lessen their impact on the financial decisions you make. What does money represent to you? How might that increase your level of stress?

Find healthy ways to manage stress. Consider healthy, stress-reducing activities — taking a short walk, exercise,meditation or talking things out with friends and family. If you make these healthy stress management behaviors a habit, when you’re in a financial crisis, you’ll have these strategies available to help you effectively reduce stress.

Keep in mind, unhealthy behaviors develop over the course of time and can be difficult to change. Don’t take on too much at one time. Focus on changing only one behavior at a time.

Seek professional support. Accepting help from friends and family who care about you and will listen to you about your financial challenges can improve your ability to manage stress. There are financial planners available to help you take control over your money situation.

If you continue to be overwhelmed by financial stress, you may want to talk with a psychologist or life coach who can help you address the emotions behind your money behaviors, manage stress and change unhealthy behaviors.

Drawing on skills and expertise developed over 30 years experience, psychologist Jeannette Samanen PhD provides effective psychotherapy, hypnotherapy, couples counseling and life coaching. Learn more by visiting her website http://www.drjeannettesamanen.com.

Author: Jeannette Samanen PhD

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Surviving Stress

Stress has become a pervasive force in our lives. Today many of us are living life in the fast lane – running around from one commitment to the next with no time to relax, and feeling overwhelmed and stressed out. Our modern day stresses have become so constant that many of us do not even associate the headaches, tight muscles, anxiety, racing heart, or difficulty sleeping to our daily stresses.

We also don’t realize that stress is an underlying factor in many chronic diseases such as diabetes, heart disease, and cancer. Stress can also reduce immune function and impair libido and fertility. It is estimated that 43% of all adults suffer adverse health effects from stress, and stress-related ailments account for 75 to 90% of all visits to physicians.

Understanding the stress response

The term “stress” was coined in 1936 by Dr. Hans Selye, a Canadian endocrinologist. He defined stress as “the non-specific response of the body to any demand for change.” In other words, stress is not an external force but rather the body’s reaction to external stimuli. It is how we react to rush hour traffic, financial problems, work deadlines and other events that we perceive as stressful. Dr. Selye recognized the mind-body connection involved with stress and claimed that it isn’t stress that harms us but distress. Distress occurs when we prolong emotional stress and don’t deal with it in a positive manner.

In response to stress our body enters a fight-flight state. The hormones adrenaline, noradrenaline and cortisol are secreted from the adrenal glands. The body enters catabolic state breaking down fuels (fats, protein and sugar) to provide energy. Heart rate and blood pressure soar to increase the flow of blood to the brain to improve decision-making. Blood is shunted away from the gut, where it not immediately needed for digestion, to the large muscles of the arms and legs to provide more strength and greater speed. Clotting occurs more quickly to prevent blood loss from lacerations or internal hemorrhage. The cortisol secreted during stress is now known to have many deleterious effects on health. Chronically elevated cortisol can wreak havoc on the nervous system, particularly the hippocampus, which is the area of the brain responsible for memory, concentration and cognitive function. It can contribute to weight gain and obesity, particularly in the abdominal area. In extreme cases, it can compromise the function of the neurons (nerve cells) resulting in neuron death.

This fight-flight response is an immediate and automatic response that was developed over human evolution as a life saving measure to help us deal with physical challenges. Today however, the nature of our stress is quite different. It is not an occasional confrontation with a wild animal or a hostile warrior but rather an onslaught of continuous emotional threats, such as feeling anxious when you are stuck in traffic, dealing with confrontations with family members, or struggling with financial problems. For many of us, these emotional stresses often occur several times throughout the day. Unfortunately, our bodies still react with those immediate and innate responses. Over time, these reactions can take a toll on our physical and emotional well-being.

Tips for De-stressing

While we can’t always avoid the things in our lives that cause us stress, we can develop better coping strategies and support our bodies with proper nutrition and supplements. Here are some suggestions for reducing stress and promoting relaxation:

Exercise

Numerous studies have shown that regular exercise can alleviate stress. It takes your mind away from your worries, reduces nervous energy and promotes relaxation. Try a combination of both aerobic activities (walking, cycling, and swimming) and stretching activities, such as yoga.

Nutritional Support

Your nutritional status can have a great impact on your ability to cope with stress. Start by eating a good breakfast. Choose foods that are low in the glycemic index (process slowly into sugar) and high in nutritional value, such as fruits, vegetables and whole grains. Avoid processed and fast food as much as possible, since these foods can cause mood swings, irritability, and anxiety and worsen stress.

Supplements

Nutritional supplements containing B-vitamins, vitamin C and magnesium can help support the body during stress as they are essential for the health and function of the nervous system. These nutrients are also depleted in the body during times of stress.

L-theanine, an amino acid found naturally in green tea, can help promote calming and relaxation and improve sleep quality. Unlike prescription tranquilizers, L-theanine is not addictive and does not cause drowsiness or impair short-term memory. In fact, studies show that L-theanine can actually heighten mental clarity and focus, while promoting relaxation. The benefits can be noticed within 30 minutes.

Breathing techniques

Otherwise known as belly breathing, deep breathing is a simple yet effective stress reduction technique. Deep breathing increases oxygen levels in the body and has a natural calming effect. Sit comfortably in a quiet area. Take a deep breath in through your nose, counting from one to four as you breathe in. Exhale through your mouth as you count down from four to one. Repeat 20 or 30 times. Try to practice deep breathing several times throughout the day, especially when you are feeling stressed.

Visualization

Visualization, also known as mental imagery or guided imagery, is a method of connecting mind and body to promote relaxation and healing. Sit or lie in a comfortable, quiet spot and close your eyes and think of a place or memory that makes you feel good and relaxed. Take slow deep breaths, relaxing all your muscles and focusing on that happy place that makes you feel good.

Sleep

With today’s busy lifestyles, sleep deprivation has become a common concern. When we are tired, we feel edgy, irritable, and are more reactive to stress. To improve your ability to cope with stress, make sleep a priority. Dedicate 7 to 9 hours each night for sleep.

Meditation

Meditation involves turning attention to a single point of reference and entering into a deep state of relaxation. In addition to promoting calmness and a sense of peace, meditation also slows heart rate and breathing, normalizes blood pressure, improves oxygenation, lowers cortisol levels, improves immune function, and slows the aging process. To meditate, go into a quiet area and sit in a comfortable position. Close your eyes and work on clearing your head. You may focus on a sound, like “om,” or on your own breathing, or on nothing at all. Try to hush the inner voices and thoughts so that you can achieve internal silence. It will take some practice, but eventually you will be able to let go of your thoughts and enjoy the feeling of relaxation. Allow 10 to 20 minutes to meditate.

Sherry Torkos, Pharmacist, health author and fitness expert is a key member of the femMED Advisory Team. femMED is a line of natural supplements made just for women. 13 doctor-recommended formulas made with the highest quality vitamins, minerals and herbs with each formula designed to address a common health concern. From heart health and hormonal balance to weight management and breast health all femMED products are free of dairy, egg, artificial colours or flavours, and almost all are gluten free, yeast free, suitable for vegetarians and delivered in a vegetable capsule. Best of all, femMED formulas are designed to work on their own, or in combination with other femMED formulas to achieve multiple health goals.

femMED. Women’s Health Made Simple.
http://www.femmed.com

Author: Sherry Torkos

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2 Stress Management Tips to Help You Relieve Stress & Enjoy Life More

Stress Management Tips:

Here is what I have included in this article to help you.

* How can you manage stress?

* How often should you manage Stress?

The amount of lives that are torn apart by stress in their everyday life is phenomenal. People lose their temper, their family life is in turmoil. Their health is suffering etc… If people would only learn to relieve stress on a daily basis instead of letting it build up.

If you are someone suffering from the effects caused by stress then read on and apply the stress management tips. I wrote this article to help folks just like you know how to deal with stress and anxiety in everyday life. It has helped a lot of people be more relaxed and enjoy their lives more.

Here are 2 of The Most Effective Ways to Relieve Stress.

1. How can I use stress management to reduce stress? The best way to manage and reduce stress is by taking frequent breaks when working on activities that are intense. Start exercising on a daily basis this works really great for relieving stress that builds up throughout the day. Spend some time doing your favorite hobbies or activities. Also spend time with others who make you laugh and really enjoy yourself. You can take daily walks to your favorite areas. This really works great for getting you relaxed and really helps take your mind off your work and responsibilities.

2. How often is stress management recommended? Trying to management stress will not work if you just use it once or twice. It is sort of like trying to get into shape you can not just go to the gym a couple of times and then expect to be in shape. It takes making it a regular habit that you practice on a daily basis to really get the relieve that you are wanting so that you can learn to relax and enjoy life more.

If you are not happy with your life then it is up to you to change it.

Do you want more tips on stress management & happiness & success tips?
Get your Free Ebook How to Unleash The Power Within Free Ebook

Author: Sunny James

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