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Lower Your Stress Levels By Using VisualisationVisualisation is a useful tool for lowering our stress levels. Like anything new it requires practice but with time and effort from you, this can offer very fast relief from symptoms. Emotional and physical responses can be evoked by images we see and in terms of what a particular image represents to us personally. I.e. Water can make us thirsty, feel the urge to use the toilet, or shiver with cold. Passing a chip shop may make you hungry. If you have already eaten, you may feel nauseous. This knowledge is empowering as we can now create images to trigger relaxation, calmness, inspiration. There are a range of different techniques which can be used. Below is a simple example of visualisation to get you started. Close your eyes and imagine yourself standing in a large garden such as A Botanic Garden. What season is it? What flowers or shrubs are around you? What smells are on the air? Are there any squirrels or birds in the garden? What is the weather like and what do the air / temperature mean for your skin? Can you tell what time of day it is? Can you hear music? Is there water running nearby? Are there children in the garden and if so what does the noise they are making suggest to you about what they are doing or how they are feeling? How does the ground feel under your feet? Are you hungry? Can you smell anything which gets your appetite up? The details you can evoke for yourself are limitless. Set aside an interval of uninterrupted time for you to practise this exercise. Try to involve all of your senses, be creative, persevere, and enjoy!
Related Links:Ashwagandha - Herb for Stress, Antidepressant, Hypertension Turning Workplace Stress into a Simple Stretch The Spiraling Effect of Your Child''s Stress And Pediatric Asthma Four Strategies You Can Try To Decrease the Stress with the Children Inside on a Rainy Day Music Therapy Healing For Stress Have A Stress Free Christmas Laugh Your Stress Away Acne - A Symptom of Stress 5 Tips to Manage Stress and Anxiety The Progression Of The Treadmill Stress Test What is stress?
Stress (roughly the opposite of relaxation) is a medical term for a wide
range of strong external stimuli, both physiological and psychological,
which can cause a physiological response called the general adaptation
syndrome, first described in 1936 by Hans Selye in the journal Nature.
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