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Stressed? Try one of these quick resets

2025/1/6
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Life Kit: Health

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Jenny Taitz
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Marielle
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Jenny Taitz: 压力不仅体现在身体症状上,例如紧张、呼吸急促等,还会表现在我们的思维和行为模式中。例如,愤怒的情绪可能伴随着对不公平的评判,身体上的紧张和皱眉,以及发送带有攻击性的短信或说出粗鲁的话语等行为。 书中介绍了75种基于证据的压力重置方法,分为针对思维、身体和行为的三种类型。思维重置方法旨在改变不利的思维模式,例如过度思考、悲观主义等;身体重置方法则关注身体上的压力体验,例如紧张、呼吸急促等;行为重置方法则旨在改善那些短期感觉良好但长期有害的行为模式。 书中介绍的几种思维重置方法包括:命名情绪(通过识别和描述情绪来降低其强度)、唱出你的想法(将想法视为游戏而非严肃对待)、制作生活饼状图(从整体视角看待生活,从而应对挫折)。 身体重置方法包括:短时间剧烈运动(将身体症状归因于运动而非灾难化)、扩大视野(放松视野,注意到更多事物,从而体验感激之情)、规律叹息(通过特殊的呼吸练习来放松身心)。 行为重置方法包括:创建希望工具箱(收集积极的物品或回忆来提升希望感)、做一件好事(提升掌控感和价值感)、向前迈一步(专注于一个可实现的小目标)。 除了这些即时缓解压力的方法外,养成良好的生活习惯,例如充足的睡眠、规律的运动、与人保持联系等,对于长期缓解压力也至关重要。 Marielle: 在节目中,Marielle 与临床心理学家 Jenny Taitz 讨论了如何快速有效地缓解压力。他们探讨了压力对身心和行为的影响,并着重介绍了书中提出的各种压力重置方法。Marielle 分享了她自己尝试这些方法的经验,并与 Jenny Taitz 共同探讨了这些方法的原理和应用。 Marielle 强调了压力重置的重要性,指出这些方法能够帮助人们在压力巨大的时刻找到应对策略,从而更好地解决问题,避免让情况变得更糟。她还与 Jenny Taitz 讨论了如何将这些方法融入日常生活中,以预防和减少压力的发生。 通过与 Jenny Taitz 的对话,Marielle 向听众传达了积极应对压力的重要信息,并鼓励听众尝试不同的方法,找到最适合自己的减压方式。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

What are stress resets and how can they help?

Stress resets are quick, evidence-based techniques to improve how you feel in minutes, allowing you to better handle stress and solve problems. They target the mind, body, and behavior, helping to soothe physical tension, reduce overthinking, and improve actions that might otherwise escalate stress.

What is the 'Name That Emotion' mind reset and how does it work?

The 'Name That Emotion' reset involves identifying and labeling your emotions, such as sadness or fear, and rating their intensity on a scale. This practice disrupts activity in the limbic system (emotional brain) and engages the prefrontal cortex (rational brain), helping you gain perspective and reduce emotional overwhelm.

How does singing your thoughts help with stress?

Singing your thoughts, especially unhelpful or repetitive ones, uses cognitive diffusion to make them less serious. By turning thoughts into a song, like singing 'I'm a loser' to a familiar tune, you can laugh at them and reduce their emotional grip, shifting focus to more rational thinking.

What is the 'make a pie chart of your life' mind reset?

This reset involves creating a visual pie chart of the domains in your life (e.g., health, career, friendships) and assigning percentages based on their importance. It helps gain perspective during stressful moments by reminding you that even if one area feels overwhelming, other meaningful aspects of life still matter.

What are some examples of body resets for stress?

Body resets include moving in short bursts (e.g., jumping jacks), expanding your gaze to notice surroundings, and cyclic sighing (inhaling twice through the nose and exhaling slowly). These techniques help reduce physical tension, refocus attention, and reset breathing patterns to alleviate anxiety.

What is cyclic sighing and how does it reduce stress?

Cyclic sighing involves taking two inhales through the nose followed by a long exhale. This practice helps release carbon dioxide, which is linked to anxiety, and resets breathing patterns. Research shows that practicing this for five minutes daily can increase positive emotions and relaxation.

What is a 'hope kit' and how can it help during stressful times?

A hope kit is a collection of objects, pictures, or mementos that remind you of positive moments or people in your life. It serves as a tangible way to shift focus from negative thoughts to hope and gratitude, helping to reduce feelings of despair and improve mood.

How can doing a good deed help with stress?

Performing a good deed, whether big or small, helps counteract feelings of powerlessness and stress. Acts like sending a card, volunteering, or simply noticing someone can create a sense of control and purpose, aligning with your values and improving your emotional state.

What is the 'take one step forward' behavior reset?

This reset focuses on taking a single, manageable step toward a goal rather than feeling overwhelmed by the big picture. For example, setting a small daily task, like calling a physical therapist, can create momentum and build confidence, leading to further progress.

What long-term habits can reduce stress and improve mental health?

Long-term stress reduction can be achieved through habits like getting adequate sleep, exercising daily, and maintaining regular social connections. These behaviors are as powerful as antidepressants and help create a more enjoyable, manageable daily life, reducing the need for frequent stress resets.

Chapters
This chapter introduces stress resets as quick ways to improve how you feel in minutes, focusing on mind, body, and behavior resets. It also promotes Life Kit's Dry January newsletter for those wanting to take a break from alcohol.
  • Stress manifests in mind, body, and behavior.
  • Stress resets are quick ways to improve how you feel.
  • Life Kit offers a Dry January newsletter for alcohol-free support.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
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This message comes from Whole Foods Market. Find sales on supplements, no antibiotics ever, grass-fed ground beef, sustainable wild-caught sockeye salmon, and more feel-good favorites. Boost your wellness routine with Jumpstart January savings at Whole Foods Market. Terms apply. You're listening to Life Kit from NPR.

Hey everybody, it's Marielle. You ever just get completely overwhelmed? The phone is ringing non-stop. You've got dozens of unread emails just from today. Your kids are fighting over a toy. You open the mail and you've got a huge unexpected bill from the doctor's office. Oh, and you're hangry, so that doesn't help anything.

The stress, you know, sometimes it just reaches a fever pitch that can feel terrible in our bodies. For some people, it's very physical. Jenny Tates is a clinical psychologist, and she says stress also shows up in our thoughts and our behaviors. So if I'm feeling really angry, that usually includes some sort of judgment of, that was really unfair.

In my body, I may be feeling really tense and scowling. And my behavior might be to send an aggressive text or say something really rude or yell. In these moments when we're overextended, it's hard to carve out a path forward. Jenny would like you to try something, though, called a stress reset. Stress resets are quick ways to improve how you feel in minutes. And that allows you ultimately to do things that will help you solve problems rather than make things so much worse for yourself.

Jenny wrote a book called Stress Resets, How to Soothe Your Body and Mind in Minutes. And on this episode of Life Kit, we're going to give you a whole bunch of resets for your mind, your body, and your behavior. You'll pick what works for you, depending on what your stress feels like and how it's showing up.

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Hey, quick question. How were your holidays? Did you have a good time? Maybe too good of a time? It's normal to have a couple extra drinks around the holidays, but maybe you're thinking it's time to take a break.

Thank you.

That's why Life Kit has created a special newsletter series to help you get through the month without alcohol. We'll cover everything from how to deal with uncomfortable questions like, hey, why aren't you drinking? To some tasty alcohol-free drinks you can make at home. You can sign up for it by going to npr.org slash dryjanuary. You can also find the link in the description for this episode.

Jenny, in the book, you outline different types of stress resets for your mind, for your body, and for your behavior. How are these different? So mind resets specifically target thinking in ways that don't serve us. Body resets really target our physical experience of stress. And behavior resets really are meant to improve our behavior so we don't act in ways that just make stress skyrocket. So...

How would you know that you might need a mind reset?

When you are really, really stuck in overthinking, thinking the worst and lacking clear perspective, and you're thinking in ways that don't inch you closer to problem solving, but you feel like you're drowning in worst case scenario thoughts. Yeah, I've been there. I guess we all have. We all have. Okay, so let's walk through a few of the mind resets from the book. I'll tell you a few of my favorites. One was Name That Emotion. Tell me what that one is.

Naming your emotion, just taking a step back and observing and describing your emotion to notice. I'm feeling sad and then labeling its intensity. Maybe you're feeling sad at a three on a zero to five scale. Loosens the grip of sadness because when you're able to observe your emotion, this allows us to not be engulfed by them, but to see them with distance and openness and to

Naming them technically kind of disrupts activity in your limbic system, which is the emotional part of the brain and allows you to engage your prefrontal cortex, which is the more reasonable part of your brain. So even if it sounds very simple, it actually physiologically makes a really profound difference. I find that it helps too if I say, you know, what am I feeling? And then it might be, for instance, fear. Sometimes I'll journal this and then I'll be like, of what?

And then it helps just to write down what I'm actually afraid of because sometimes looking at those things, I'm like, well, those are very unlikely to happen. Or if they do happen, I am able to handle that.

I love that. And I also love simply thinking like if I'm feeling sad, it's pretty likely that I am a magnet for sad thoughts. And so rather than taking them very seriously, being really aware that my thinking is governed by sadness rather than the reality at hand. Yeah. Okay. Another one I really liked, another mind reset is sing your thoughts. What is this one about?

So singing your thoughts really gets at the concept of cognitive diffusion, which means playing with your thoughts rather than taking them so seriously. And one of the funnest ways to remember this is if you know that you have a recurrent thought that's simply not true and not helpful, but something that's likely to come up when you're feeling emotions intensely. Let's say you're feeling lonely on a Saturday night and your mind tends to berate you with the thought that I'm a loser.

Rather than telling yourself you're not or trying to convince yourself, really seeing that for what it is. It's just noise. To remember that, if you did something like saying, I'm a loser to the tune of, do you believe in magic? Or one of my clients taught me this, and I think this is the best way to apply this, is even just thinking, what are thoughts? Like to the Hathaway song, what is love?

Love can't hurt me no more. You know, what are thoughts? Thoughts can't hurt me no more. So if your thoughts are more like Play-Doh rather than cement, they can't hold you back in your life. Yeah, I will say there's one that I find pops into my head, the repeating thought, like, nobody likes you. But it also sounds like just as such a silly thing to sing. Like, I was just listening to Build Me Up Buttercup.

You know, so maybe something like that. Like, why does everyone, everyone hate me so much? That's perfect because now you can't sing that without laughing. So that automatically puts your inner wisdom in the front seat and your irrational thoughts where they belong. Okay.

Yeah, that's such a powerful way for people to realize if this is working or not. If you have a sense of humor rather than a sense of defeat, then that's a good clue that you're on the right track. And this is not for thoughts like I need to get my work done. This is for thoughts that are downright unhelpful and ridiculous. Okay.

All right, so the other mind reset that I really liked was make a pie chart of your life. Can you explain this one? Yes. So making a pie chart is really a way to remember all of the things that matter to us. And so if we take a step back and we write down with a pen and paper all of the various domains of our lives that matter, let's say our health, our career, our friendships, our hobbies,

and then visually representing them. So their relative weight is aligned with how much they matter. So maybe health is like 30% and hobbies is 20% or you need to really do some soul searching and come up with the numbers that represent what's truest for you. And making a pie chart of our lives is such a

essential way to gain perspective when something disappointing happens because it's so easy if you're doing something like interviewing for a job you really want to think that everything is terrible if you don't get that role and of course it's a huge disappointment and I don't want to

minimize that at all. But I also want people to realize that even if something feels like it's everything, there are a lot of other things that matter. You say it's kind of like zooming out to see the full picture. Exactly. Got it. Okay, let's talk about body resets. When would you know that you might need one of these? If you are feeling really physically stressed, if you're really tense, if your shoulders are up to your ears, if you're finding that you're short of breath...

If you feel really distracted by your body, like you can't sit at your desk because you feel so restless or overwhelmed physically. Okay. All right. So one is move your body in short, quick bursts. What might that look like? If you're feeling very revved up,

A lot of times people just use that as evidence that something's really wrong. And so if you instead do something like do some jumping jacks and then you can attribute your physical symptoms of stress to the exercise you're doing rather than something that you're catastrophizing and feeling afraid of. Mm-hmm.

Another one is expand your gaze. And I have to say, I tried this the other day when I was feeling really stressed out and I was out to lunch, but thinking about and overthinking about something. And this really worked. Can you talk about what it means? Expand your gaze? I'm so happy this really worked for you. Yeah, a lot of times as part of our stress response, we hyper focus or we zoom in on what is happening.

we're stressed about. And so simply zooming out to adopt a more relaxed view. So you might notice three sights. Maybe you notice three sounds because when we're stressed, our pupils tend to dilate and we narrow our attention. This is part of our fight or flight response. But when we literally relax our gaze, it's a little easier to just realize that there's so much more than the narrow focus of our stress.

Yeah, I was sitting at a restaurant. The weather was still nice enough that I could be sitting outside, actually. And I had been looking at my phone, but I just put it down and put it in my bag. And then I picked my head up and I looked at what was happening across the street. I looked at somebody walking their dog. I looked at like a bookstore, just different things like that. Literally like zooming out the camera lens in my own eyeball, you know? Yeah.

And I love that because that allows you to naturally experience gratitude. A lot of people feel like gratitude is something being forced upon them that feels fake. But when we just look a little wider and bigger, there are so many things within our periphery that allow us to genuinely experience thanks and awareness. Yeah. All right. One more body reset. Sigh it out. Now,

Let's talk about this one because I do find that this helps, but also if you're around other people and you're deep sighing, it can make them feel a little bit uncomfortable or anxious. Yeah. And Muriel, this is the reason that there's 75 options in here because different things really work for different people. But to do this, you gently close your lips and you inhale through your nose, then take another inhale through your nose. So

And then an extended exhale. And this is called a physiological sigh. And repeating it a couple of times is known as cyclic sighing. And researchers have found that people practicing this

for five minutes a day, experience more positive emotions. And when you intentionally sigh, your lungs expand. And so you release more carbon dioxide. And a lot of carbon dioxide is associated with anxiety. And so by practicing this, you can kind of reset your breathing pattern, feel a little bit more relaxed. And then doing this can kind of lend itself to

slowing down your breathing in general. I get it. So it sounds like this is a very particular kind of breathing practice. It's not just like, all right, everybody, deep sigh, like,

You know what I mean? Like, I come from a family of deep sires is what I'm saying. And it is often used as a tool to indicate frustration to one's family members. But this sounds like a different thing where it's kind of a private moment and you're just inhaling through your nose and then...

Inhaling again a little bit and then exhaling long. Yeah, and it doesn't need to be a grunt. I could do it right now, you know, two back-to-back inhales, a longer exhale, and that might just seem like I'm almost like recalibrating. It does work. All right, so our last category is behavior resets. How might you know that you need one of these?

When you are acting in ways that are almost like the equivalent of a high interest credit card where short term you might be feeling pretty good, but long term your behaviors are going to come back to haunt you. So oftentimes stress isn't just a feeling but also a behavior. And it might be helpful to just take a step back and think about what are your go-to stress behaviors that you want to improve. Is it

being mean to the people around you? Is it canceling plans that you actually would enjoy because you want to curl up in bed? And so the first step would be to get really clear on what you tend to do when you get stressed and know that there are a lot of ways to make this moment better that aren't going to hurt us long term. Okay. So some examples from the book are, for instance, to build a hope kit. What would that look like?

If you're focusing on the negative, it's really helpful to have a way to quickly lean into hope. And hope isn't just a feeling, but it's a behavior. And creating a collection of objects, pictures, other sorts of mementos that remind you of things being better can help keep you going and

If you're someone that has a really good friend group and you could look at a picture of some close friends or if music has always been a really powerful mood boost for you, having a playlist that you go to. Remarkably, there's an app called the Virtual Hope Box app. And people that struggle with suicidal feelings who use the Virtual Hope Box app actually have a reduction in

Feelings of wanting to die and again, reminding ourselves in our hardest moments that we can continue forward and things will get better and have been better is such a gift to ourselves rather than predicting and rehearsing all the ways things will continue to be terrible. Yeah.

For me, it's often pictures of my family and friends and my friends' kids and dogs. And like, I'll just pull them out and look at them. Like there's even one recent picture of my friend's daughter,

eating a marshmallow and her cheeks look so big. And it's just like the cutest, squishiest picture ever. She's a year old. Like I've been looking at it recently when I have felt down. I love that. Pictures are so powerful. Like pictures actually can reduce our experience of pain. Like looking at uplifting pictures or pictures of people that we love and

I personally love music and I love greeting cards, like cards that people have written me that I can keep handy. Yeah, that's really lovely. Okay, another behavior reset is to do a good deed. What might you do? What are some examples? There are so many ways to do good deeds. It could be something big. It could be something small. Even just noticing someone that might not normally be noticed. Sending someone a card just out of the blue is

is a really sweet gesture. And if you want to really commit to this, even finding a volunteer opportunity could make a really big difference. And this is such a nice way to feel like you have a say in your life. A lot of the reasons that we feel stressed is because we feel powerless or we're so focused on all of the things that are going wrong. And doing something nice is a way to actually feel like you have some ability to make things better and also gives you a

and helps you feel like you can live by your values even if so much is out of your control. Yeah. Okay, what about take one step forward? I liked this one a lot. Taking one step forward is about doing the thing that we can do. And so rather than feeling overwhelmed, really picking one thing that you want to try to do to move closer to your goals. And so rather than

making things feel really overwhelming by being too ambitious, just being really clear on the one thing that you can do that will be realistic and within reach. And it was really amazing, Mariel, for this book I interviewed someone named John Moynihan, who is a police officer who was really seriously injured. He was shot while working and

He was actually shot in the face. It was a very horrific injury and a long recovery. And I asked him how he went from

being in critical care to returning to his life in so many ways. And he really walked me through. He set one goal at a time. And his first goal, starting when he was in the hospital, was doing this run that he did every summer since childhood. It was a seven-mile run in Cape Cod. And that was just his goal. It wasn't, how am I going to figure the rest of my life out? How am I going to

fully recover. It was like, how do I learn how to walk again so I could complete this run somehow, even if I'm walking it? And setting that one goal created a positive cycle where other positive forward movement came as a result.

Yeah. And even that goal, I imagine, started with something even smaller, right? He probably had to go to physical therapy. So it was like, make appointment with physical therapist. And that's today's task, you know, or like, do my exercises today. Yeah, because it's so easy for us also to then think about the next thing. But if it's even...

call the physical therapist and stand up for one moment and really celebrating that rather than feeling less than for not having finished everything in its entirety. Okay, so these are all really helpful recess that can help us in the moment when we're feeling overwhelmed by stress. I wonder if

What's the work after those moments, right? What can we do to kind of improve or change our lives so that maybe we're not experiencing as much stress?

For most of us, mental health is really a series of behaviors. And a lot of us underestimate that our habits can be as powerful as antidepressants. And so rather than waiting to be in a really tough situation and trying to get yourself out of it, there are things we can do in advance. You know, getting a good night's sleep is a huge way to relieve stress. Exercising every day is a really powerful antidepressant. Connecting with people on a regular basis is such a powerful thing.

tool that even reduces the risk of getting a cold. And so rather than just leaning on quick things and difficult moments, we also want to set ourselves up to feel like our day-to-day life is more enjoyable and more livable and setting us up for success. And so I don't want anyone to feel like the goal of life is to build a hope kit or to sing your thoughts, but doing those things will allow us to

from the things that are holding us back and inch towards the things that we want our lives to stand for. Wow, I feel like I could talk to you about this for days. Thank you so much. These are really helpful, Jenny. Thank you so much. I really appreciate your time. I want everyone to really realize that a little can go such a long way. It's like small wheels on a big suitcase. A moment of awareness and a doable strategy can make what feels overwhelming really doable. All right, time for a recap.

If your mind is feeling all squirrely, try a mind reset. Name an emotion. Sing your thoughts. Make a pie chart of what's important in your life. Or maybe you're feeling like you need a body reset. Try moving your body, relaxing your gaze, or doing some cyclic sighing. Or if you've been acting out a little bit, maybe you try a behavior reset. Put together a collection of objects that make you hopeful. Do a good deed. Or just take one step forward towards a goal.

Now, these resets aren't everything you need to know about mental health, but they will give you some space to figure out what you need and what changes you'd like to make in your life. For more Life Kit, check out our other episodes. We've got one about dealing with anxiety in the moment and another about making gratitude a habit. You can find those at npr.org slash life kit. And if you love Life Kit and you just cannot get enough, subscribe to our newsletter at npr.org slash life kit newsletter.

Also, we love hearing from you. So if you have episode ideas or feedback you want to share, please email us at lifekit at npr.org. This episode of Life Kit was produced by Margaret Serino. Our visuals editor is Beck Harlan and our digital editor is Malika Gribb. Megan Cain is the supervising editor and Beth Donovan is our executive producer. Our production team also includes Andy Tegel, Claire Marie Schneider and Sylvie Douglas. Engineering support comes from Gilly Moon. I'm Mariel Segarra.

Thanks for listening.

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