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Stress is Good & Bad – How to Manage Stress - featured image
Ahmad Imam Square Wide Lo Rez 400.jpgtom Corley
By Tom Corley
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Stress is Good & Bad – How to Manage Stress

Imagine you’re part of a group of cavemen, walking through the tall grass in the Savanna on the hunt for your next meal.

Suddenly, a member of your group catches a glimpse of a lion out of the corner of their eye.

The member motions to the other members of the group.

In a split second everyone in the group goes on high alert, intensely focused on the movement of the lion.

Stress

As if the entire group were one person, you all cautiously move away from the direction of the lion, never taking your eye off that lion, until everyone is out of harm's way.

Stress is an evolutionary radar system whose purpose is to enable humans to intensely focus on a single threat until the threat no longer poses any danger.

It gives us laser-like focus for a short period of time.

Everything in our environment, other than the threat, becomes background noise and is ignored.

In the modern world, stress makes it possible for us to study for final exams, send a man to the moon, fight off a mugger, and even defeat the Nazis.

Good Stress allows us to solve pressing problems.

But stress comes at a cost.

Stress causes our focus to become very narrow.

It limits our ability to see anything but the problem.

Stress forces us to have tunnel vision.

Stress that sticks around too long is called chronic stress.

Chronic stress damages the immune system, causes plaque to build up in arteries and can lead to high blood pressure, which could cause a stroke or heart attack.

Work-related chronic stress inhibits every stressed-out employee’s ability to solve company problems because it prevents employees from being able to see the bigger picture, due to the narrowing of focus effect that stress causes.

To stay healthy and solve problems in the workplace, we need to turn off stress.

Problem-solving, in particular, requires a relaxed mind.

Only in a stress-free state are we able to creatively find solutions to problems.

So, how do you shut down stress and relax your mind?

Business Stress

  • Laugh – Find something to laugh about. When you are under stress, find something funny to distract you. Humour shuts down stress and helps re-set you return to your emotional baseline.
  • Meditate – Go to a bathroom stall and devote a few minutes to meditation. Meditation calms the mind, shuts down stress and helps you return to your emotional baseline.
  • Exercise – Lift weights, go for a run or a walk, do yoga or get on a StairMaster. Exercise decreases stress.
  • Read – Reading something uplifting will shift your mindset from negative to positive and shut stress down.
  • Watch an Inspiring Movie – Watching a movie that inspires, excites, makes you laugh or that takes you away to another place will turn off stress.
  • Listen to Relaxing Music – Music calms the savage beast. Music relaxes the mind, turning stress off.
  • Engage in Some Creative Activity – Paint, write or make something. Engaging in a creative activity puts stress on the bookshelf.
  • Have a Beer – Moderate consumption of alcohol relaxes the mind. One to two drinks is all you need to put stress in its place. Just don’t overdo it.
  • Socialise – Hang out with a friend, volunteer at a local charity, or go to a party or gathering. Socializing relaxes the mind and changes your mindset.
  • Change Your Environment – Step away from your desk, cubicle or work area and into an environment that puts you in a good mood. This washes away your stress, for the moment.

Ahmad Imam Square Wide Lo Rez 400.jpgtom Corley
About Tom Corley Tom is a CPA, CFP and heads one of the top financial firms in New Jersey. For 5 years, Tom observed and documented the daily activities of wealthy people and people living in poverty and his research he identified over 200 daily activities that separated the “haves” from the “have nots” which culminated in his #1 bestselling book, Rich Habits – The Daily Success Habits of Wealthy Individuals. Visit the website: www.richhabits.net
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