Showing posts with label relax. Show all posts
Showing posts with label relax. Show all posts

23.9.15

How to Relax Completely in 10 Seconds


Constantly feeling anxiety is a major part of the every day life for millions of individuals.  The prognosis for anxiety disorders is among the worst within the diverse families of psychopathology. From a medical perspective, treatment typically consists of prescribing benzodiazepines (e.g., lorazepam, clonazepam, diazepam), which yield substance dependence and chemical tolerance.  These medications relieve the symptoms but leave the causes untreated.  From a pure psychotherapy perspective, the prognosis for anxiety is just as bad; Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy, the most employed technique nowadays, targets specific ideas that trigger feelings of anxiety, but this is ineffective because of the nature of anxiety.  Unlike phobias - fears tied to specific triggers - anxiety results from persistent fear that has lost its triggers, spreading throughout the brain.  If you manipulate some ideas by frequent repetition, the anxiety resurfaces elsewhere, again because the causes are not being treated.

But not all is hopeless.  Relaxation techniques used properly and frequently both relive anxiety and rewire the very same neural networks that generate it.  Previously I posted a technique for combating anxiety in the morning by listening and singing to a specific adaptation of Beethoven's Ode to Joy.  In what follows, I will provide instructions for a shorter and way more effective relaxation technique.



How to Relax in 10 Seconds


The following technique is not well known, but it works like a charm.  You will have to stand up and adopt what I call the "Receptive Position".  This position is a variant of the so-called Anatomic Position, as shown below.



So here are the instructions for how to relax in 10 seconds with the Receptive Position:
Step 1:  Stand up straight, shoulders back but relaxed.

Step 2:  Raise your shin a little (as in a "proud" emotional stance).

Step 3:  Drop your arms to your side and completely relax all tensions that might be hiding there.

Step 4:  Make your palms face forward and try again to relax your arms. (This is the hardest part of the exercise; if it causes you some pain, you may slightly make them face a little bit towards you, so long as they are still mostly facing forward and not towards your body.)

Step 5:  Make sure your body is as free of tension as you can possibly get it to be.

Step 6:  Close your eyes.

Step 7:  Breathe deeply, counting in silence every exhalation until you reach 10. (If you are extra stressed, breathe and count each exhalation until 15.)

Step 8:  Upon counting 10 (or 15), immediately open your eyes. 


Do it!  After finishing, ask yourself - How do you feel at that precise moment?

If you are so anxious that your first attempt caused you some physical discomfort, please just do the exercise one more time.  This really does work for everyone.

Once you've learned how to do this easy procedure correctly, you know that you can always repeat it whenever anxious or overly stressed if you can find a place where you enjoy some privacy.

I hope that this exercise has provided you immediate relief.


BONUS:  You can check how anxious you are via elevating yourself by getting on the tips of your toes as you inhale, then lowering yourself during exhalation.  Be careful!  If you are anxious, you will feel that you are falling as you get on the tip of your toes (a vertigo-like feeling).  In contrast, if you are not anxious, elevating yourself in this way will not cause you any feeling of discomfort.

25.6.15

Combating anxiety in the morning - Ode to Joy


Many people suffer from constant anxiety.  The clinical prognosis for combating anxiety from a medical perspective is extremely poor.  Moreover, the medications prescribed for anxiety have terrible side effects; on the one hand, benzodiazepine type medications like Ativan, Klonopin, and Valium lead quickly to substance dependence and chemical tolerance, and on the other hand, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs; antidepressants like Prozac and Paxil) level off all emotions equally, resulting in, for example, a high percentage of users experiencing sexual side effects, both in the desire and the execution stage.  

From a pure psychotherapy perspective, the prognosis for anxiety is just as bad.  The most prevalent method used today, Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy, targets specific ideas and triggers that set off feelings of anxiety, but this is ineffective.  Why?  Because of the nature of anxiety itself.  Unlike phobias, which are fears tied to specific triggers like dogs or enclosed spaces, anxiety is entrenched fear that has lost its triggers and has become generalized throughout the brain.  If you take away some triggers, it just morphs into others, ever rearing its ugly head.

So what can be done?  Many relaxation techniques do relieve anxiety effectively, and I will be describing a lot of them in later posts, like in How to Relax Completely in 10 Seconds. But I wanted to begin with a very simple one - listening to the Ode to Joy in Spanish.

Beethoven's Ode to Joy not only holds a renowned place in the history of opera and classical music, it is also currently the anthem of the European Union.

The video below is a 1970 Spanish version adaptation of Ode to Joy composed by Waldo de los Ríos and sung by Miguel Ríos, based on the fourth movement of Beethoven's ninth symphony.

If you suffer from anxiety, it would do you well to listen to this song in the morning, singing along (what does it matter if you don't know Spanish?  It's an easy song to learn).  I have provided an English translation of the lyrics below the video.





For Mobile users who cannot see the video above, here is Oda a la Alegría.


------

Translation of Himno de la Alegría


Listen, brother, to the song of joy,

The joyul song of he who waits for a new day.

Come sing, dream singing, live dreaming the new sun

In which men will become brothers again.


Come sing, dream singing, live dreaming the new sun

In which men will become brothers again.


If in your path only exists sadness

And the bitter weeping of complete solitude,

Come sing, dream singing, live dreaming the new sun

In which men will become brothers again.


If it is that you cannot find joy here on Earth,

Search for it, brother, beyond the stars.

Come sing, dream singing, live dreaming the new sun

In which men will become brothers again.


If it is that you cannot find joy here on Earth

Search for it, brother, beyond the stars.

1.4.15

Mindfulness Music for Children


Mindfulness meditation techniques are important for the mind to self-organize in a coherent, productive, healthy way, by releasing tension and removing fear from our minds and souls.



For Mobile users who cannot see the video above, here is Mindfulness Music for Children

Featured Original:

How You Know What You Know

In a now classic paper, Blakemore and Cooper (1970) showed that if a newborn cat is deprived of experiences with horizontal lines (i.e., ...