3 Lifestyle Triggers that Relieve Depression and Anxiety
Depression and anxiety are a big problem for a lot of people. It feels like this problem becomes a part of who you are.
It doesn’t have to be that way.
I
have seen people transform from being crippled by depression and
anxiety, to a point where they get that feeling of serenity back in
their lives. The dark cloud of depression begins to fade and the heavy
weight of anxiety gets lighter. They used the 3 ‘lifestyle triggers’ to
achieve this state.
The beauty of these particular lifestyle
triggers is their simplicity. No side effects. Not emotionally draining.
This makes it so easy to stay committed and consistent towards them.
So you probably have one big question right now…
What Is A ‘Lifestyle Trigger’?…
First,
you need to understand what is actually going on with your body when
you’re feeling depressed and anxious. Once you can understand the
physical problem, you just need to know how to reverse it.
First, some science…
I
want you to imagine you have 2 buckets in your body (ok, maybe not too
science-y). One bucket is for stress hormones (cortisol and adrenaline),
the other is for feel-good neurotransmitters (these are messengers in
the brain responsible for mood). Normally, there is a good balance
between these two buckets and they complement each other, helping the
body create a state of serenity. I call this balance your ‘Hormone
Harmony’, remember this, it’s important for later.
When you’re
depressed and anxious, the stress hormone bucket fills to level where it
is unmanageable to the body. The feel-good neurotransmitter bucket
empties to a level where they don’t work or receive correctly anymore.
These imbalances your hormone harmony, therefore ending the serenity and
creating all the nasty symptoms of depression and anxiety.
That’s
why sometimes you might feel like you have no rational reason for
feeling depressed or anxious, but you still feel like crap. You can’t
just ‘Snap out of it’. You can’t just click your figures and fix a
broken hormone harmony. So don’t be hard on yourself about it.
You
need to reverse the damage done to your hormone harmony, therefore
reducing your symptoms. The answer to this is something I call
‘Lifestyle Triggers’. This is a principle I have developed, working as
the fitness coordinator at one of the UK’s leading mental health
hospitals. The great thing is, they help improve general mental health
(memory, energy, mood) as well as reducing symptoms of depression and
anxiety.
Basically, these are slight unique changes and factors in
your lifestyle, you could look at them as small steps that reverse the
damage to your hormone harmony. This is why they can give you quicker
relief from symptoms of depression and anxiety compared with traditional
psychotherapy. This is because they are fixing the physical root cause
of the symptoms… your hormone harmony. I’m not for one moment suggesting
you shouldn’t undergo psychotherapy, just pointing out that you’ll need
an approach from both angles.
So, the 3 lifestyle triggers I’m going to share with you…
1. Create A Positive ‘Exercise-Stress Axis’
The
exercise-stress axis is a principle I created and work by, which allows
me to use exercise to relieve depression and anxiety. Let me explain…
All exercise is a stress on the body. Your body can either adapt to this
stress, thereby lowering your stress hormones at rest, or it can
overload the body and actually increase stress hormones at rest. I call
this balance your exercise-stress axis. The idea is to create a positive
one so that over time your stress hormones reduce right down and
improve your hormone harmony.
With me so far? Good, let’s keep going…
The
key is to not use traditional exercise, instead use something I call
‘flexible exercise’. This is different from traditional exercise as
it’s far shorter, 10/20/30 minutes long. These short timely bursts of
exercise give the body a chance to adapt to the stress of exercise,
therefore emptying the body of stress hormones giving you an improved
hormone harmony and relieving symptoms.
2. Avoid ‘Negative Trigger Foods’
The
food we eat is constantly affecting our hormones, neurotransmitters and
nervous system. I call these 3 systems your power 3 as they can all
rebalance your hormone harmony when they are functioning correctly. I
call this constant dynamic between the food you eat and the power 3 the
‘Food-Mood Constant’. The idea is to create a positive food-mood
constant, therefore relieving symptoms through a better functioning
power 3. So a simple way to get started with this is one crucial
‘lifestyle trigger’… Avoid ‘Negative Trigger Foods’,
these are all the foods that inhibit the power 3 and trigger a negative
response to your hormone harmony. Some of these foods are well known…
Big
portions of simple carbohydrates and sugar- will create peaks and lows
in blood sugar. This forces the body to increase stress hormones
(adrenalin and cortisol) to try and rebalance it.
Over processed
foods- will put pressure on the power 3 and stop them functioning
properly. Unfortunately, there’s a lot of these negative trigger foods,
some are hidden by clever marketing.
3. Have A Daily ‘Motivational Prompt’
The
final lifestyle trigger brings it all together and just helps to ensure
consistency and compliance to the first two. Simply create a
‘motivational prompt’ and write it down each day. This is something that
instantly triggers motivation for the person that day.
This is
usually a desired outcome of the first two lifestyle triggers like;
improve my energy, feel less tired and fatigued, feel less stressed,
reduce my anxiety. When motivation is feeling low and you feel like you
might not bother doing your 10 minutes flexible exercise workout or you
are going to binge on some negative trigger foods, look at the prompt
and remind yourself why you are using the lifestyle triggers.
The Beauty Of Lifestyle Triggers…
The
beauty of lifestyle triggers is that you are in control of them. Unlike
therapy or medication where you may feel dependent on a therapist or
pill, you get a real sense self-control which is really empowering and
very important to someone depressed or anxious.
This means you are
in control of the depression or anxiety, not the other way around. As I
have already said, I’m not suggesting you shouldn’t do therapy or take
medication, but you should be using things like lifestyle triggers along
with them.
Remember, if you are experiencing symptoms of
depression or anxiety, always seek medical advice and talk to a doctor.
These things are nothing to ashamed of. If you found this useful please
like and share, as it might help someone else going through the same
thing. We can beat depression and anxiety together.More Info:.lifehack.org
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