Exercises To Calm Your Anxious Thoughts
Breathing and stress
Breathing is an automatic function of the body that is controlled by our brain. When we feel stressed, our breathing changes as part of the ‘fight-or-flight response’.
The good news is, we also have the power to change our own breathing. Scientific studies show that controlling your breath can help to manage stress and stress-related conditions. Breath control is also used in practices such as yoga and some forms of meditation. Many people use their breathing to promote relaxation and reduce stress.
When you are under stress, you start to breath differently. Typically, an anxious person takes small, shallow breaths, using their shoulders rather than their diaphragm to move air in and out of their lungs. This style of breathing disrupts the balance of gases in the body. Shallow over-breathing, or hyperventilation, can prolong feelings of anxiety by making the physical symptoms of stress worse. Controlling your breathing can help to improve some of these symptoms.
Relaxation response
When you are relaxed, you breathe through your nose in a slow, even and gentle way. Deliberately copying a relaxed breathing pattern seems to calm the nervous system that controls the body’s involuntary functions.
Controlled breathing can cause the below physiological changes:
lowered blood pressure and heart rate
reduced levels of stress hormones in the blood
increased physical energy
increased feelings of calm and wellbeing
reduced lactic acid build-up in muscle tissue
balanced levels of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the blood
improved immune system functioning
Abdominal breathing
There are different breathing techniques to promote relaxation. The general aim is to shift from upper chest breathing to abdominal breathing. You will need a quiet, relaxed environment where you won’t be disturbed for 10 to 20 minutes. Set an alarm if you don’t want to lose track of time.
Sit comfortably and raise your ribcage to expand your chest. Place one hand on your chest and the other on your abdomen. Take notice of how your upper chest and abdomen are moving while you breathe. Concentrate on your breath and try to gently breathe in and out through the nose. Your upper chest and stomach should be still, allowing the diaphragm to work more efficiently with your abdomen rather than your chest.
With each breath, allow any tension in your body to slip away. Once you are breathing slowly and with your abdomen, sit quietly and enjoy the sensation of physical relaxation.
Special considerations
Some people find that concentrating on their breath actually provokes panic and hyperventilation. If this happens to you, look for another way to relax.
Your Top 3 to keep in mind
Shallow, upper chest breathing is part of the typical stress response.
The stress response can be reduced by consciously breathing using the diaphragm.
Abdominal breathing helps to control the nervous system and encourages the body to relax, bringing about a range of health benefits.
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