Mental Health Tips – Healthy Diet Trends https://healthydiettrends.com Your Companion Thu, 08 May 2025 03:06:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://healthydiettrends.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/cropped-iconfav-32x32.png Mental Health Tips – Healthy Diet Trends https://healthydiettrends.com 32 32 16 Evidence-Backed Ways to Reduce Stress https://healthydiettrends.com/16-evidence-backed-ways-to-reduce-stress/ Thu, 08 May 2025 03:06:46 +0000 https://healthydiettrends.com/?p=854 Chronic stress can seriously affect both physical and mental health. Long-term exposure is linked to heart disease, anxiety, depression, high blood pressure, and impaired immunity. While individual responses to stress vary, these 16 strategies are scientifically supported to help manage and reduce it.

1. Get Regular Exercise

A 6-week study found that aerobic activity just two times per week reduced perceived stress significantly. The CDC recommends at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise weekly. Activities like walking, cycling, or swimming can boost mood and improve resilience to stress.

2. Eat a Balanced Diet

Diets high in processed foods and sugar are linked to higher stress levels. Whole foods rich in fiber, magnesium, and B vitamins—like vegetables, fruits, nuts, legumes, and fish—support brain health and mood regulation.

3. Limit Screen Time

Excessive screen use, especially on smartphones, is associated with increased stress and poor sleep quality. Reducing screen time—especially before bed—can improve both mental health and rest.

4. Practice Self-Care

Simple acts like stretching, walking outdoors, taking a bath, or preparing a healthy meal can help restore calm. Self-care improves mood and reduces stress hormone levels.

5. Start Journaling

Writing down your thoughts helps release tension and clarify emotions. Even brief daily journaling can lower stress and promote emotional processing.

6. Reduce Caffeine Intake

While moderate caffeine intake is safe, too much can heighten anxiety and disturb sleep. Experts recommend keeping caffeine under 400 mg/day—roughly 4 cups of coffee.

7. Connect with Loved Ones

A strong social support network buffers stress. Spending time with friends and family—or joining support groups—can improve emotional well-being.

8. Set Boundaries and Say No

Overcommitting can lead to burnout. Learn to respectfully decline tasks or invitations that add unnecessary stress. Protecting your time is an act of self-care.

9. Avoid Procrastination

Putting things off increases stress and can harm sleep and health. Creating a to-do list and breaking tasks into smaller steps can help reduce overwhelm and improve focus.

10. Try Yoga

Yoga combines movement, breath control, and mindfulness—leading to lower cortisol, heart rate, and blood pressure. Practicing regularly can also support better emotional regulation.

11. Practice Mindfulness and Meditation

Even short daily meditation sessions can reduce anxiety and stress. Techniques like Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) are especially effective for long-term emotional regulation.

12. Engage in Physical Affection

Positive touch—like hugging or cuddling—can release oxytocin, which lowers stress hormones. It also reduces heart rate and blood pressure.

13. Spend Time in Nature

Just 10 minutes in a natural setting can reduce stress levels. Whether it’s walking in a park or sitting in a garden, time outdoors improves both mood and focus.

14. Try Deep Breathing Techniques

Practices like diaphragmatic breathing, alternate nostril breathing, and box breathing can lower your heart rate and trigger the body’s relaxation response.

15. Spend Time with Pets

Interacting with pets releases oxytocin, lowers cortisol, and provides companionship. Caring for a pet can give structure, purpose, and joy to your daily life.

16. Consider Nutritional Supplements

Deficiencies in magnesium, B vitamins, or omega-3 fatty acids may affect your ability to handle stress. Consult a healthcare provider before starting any supplement regimen.

Final Takeaway

Chronic stress doesn’t have to control your life. Incorporating even a few of these research-backed strategies—like regular exercise, mindfulness, and meaningful connections—can improve your mental well-being and support long-term health.

Also Read : Latest Advances in Menopause Treatment: Managing Symptoms with Modern Approaches

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How to Accept When Stress Is Too Much (and What to Do Next) https://healthydiettrends.com/how-to-accept-when-stress-is-too-much-and-what-to-do-next/ Tue, 06 May 2025 08:19:17 +0000 https://healthydiettrends.com/?p=839 A few years back, my dad was near end-of-life, my marriage was on the rocks, and I was training for the Boston Marathon. It was a lot to deal with – emotionally and physically. I ended up injured and never saw the start line. There’s a technical term for this: allostatic overload. (“Allostasis” refers to your body’s response to stressors; overload is just what it sounds like.) More and more evidence suggests that allostatic overload can harm our health – linking it to heart risks, high blood pressure, poor mental health, and early death. Consequences can be external too: College football players, for instance, are more likely to get injured during finals and midterms, research shows.

We all live in a perpetual state of allostatic load – the pileup of stress from a variety of sources. It’s just a question of how much load. Our bodies and minds are pretty resilient, but if one or more of those sources of stress gets over-amped, we enter a state of allostatic overload. When that happens for a prolonged period, part of your body may give out.

“Think of your body like a car,” said Natalie C. Dattilo, PhD, a Boston-based clinical psychologist. “As you use it and drive it over time, the wear and tear add up. If you’re not maintaining it, the car breaks down.”

Your body can break down from allostatic overload in many ways. For some people, it’s aches and pains, injuries, muscle tension in your back, stomach issues, and more frequent illness.

The Basics: Stress

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Then there’s an emotional or psychological reaction to allostatic overload: You’re more cranky, you can’t sleep because your brain won’t turn off, and you fall into depressive or anxious states.

In some cases, you may have both mental and physical fallout from your stress overload.

How do you know if you’re in allostatic overload? It can be hard to tell, even for professionals. Psychologist Jennifer Dragonette, PsyD, points out that it’s not a DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) diagnosis, so it’s not something people necessarily recognize. “We don’t have a medication for it,” said Dragonette, a clinical services instructor at Newport Healthcare in California. “It often masquerades as anxiety or depression or is co-morbid with those conditions.”

Related:
Why You Need to Get Enough Sleep
Allostatic overload doesn’t start with one specific, identifiable experience, either. “Part of treatment is figuring out what’s happening and why,” said Dragonette. “I often work backwards with my patients to parse out the causes.”

Best-case, you can recognize when you’re wading into dangerous territory and do something about it. But even if you miss your chance at prevention, you can find your way out from under overload. Here’s how.

Make a List and Decide Priorities

Everyone has unavoidable duties in life. Parents must take care of children; jobs need doing despite heavy workloads; friends need help. Some stressors are more universal – the pandemic, for instance, or periods of global upheaval.

The key: Some factors are within our control, and others aren’t.

10 Ways to Stop Stress Now

Dattilo likes to guide her patients in listing all their stressors and then helping them figure out what to take off their plates. “When we feel overwhelmed, we’re mentally disorganized and it all feels like too much to manage,” she said. “But when you take action by prioritizing what’s urgent and what’s not, you can help slay anxiety.”

Literally take a piece of paper and write down all the demands on your life and time, she suggested. Then cross off any that are out of your control. Federal workers might be worried about job security, for instance. That’s understandable, but it’s also by and large out of their control. They should try to scratch that from the list of worries.

“When you’re down to a list of demands that are within your control, prioritize them,” said Dattilo. “What’s urgent that you must take care of right now? What’s a demand that you can let slide?”

This whittles down the demands on your psyche so you can attend to the most important and timely priorities, she said. See if this helps you feel a bit more settled.

Exercise to Manage Stress

This one is tricky. Exercise can play a key role in managing allostatic overload. But if you’re not careful, it can also lead to injury. There are ways to find the middle ground when life is coming at you hard. “It’s challenging because overload doesn’t have a clear presentation like a rolled ankle,” said Gene Shirokobrod, DPT, a Maryland-based physical therapist. “More often it’s a long buildup and then a straw that breaks your back.”

“Overload doesn’t have a clear presentation like a rolled ankle. More often it’s a long buildup and then a straw that breaks your back.”
Gene Shirokobrod, DPT
Related:
Why You Need to Get Enough Sleep
Consider back pain. If you’re in allostatic overload, you may have a long lead-up to injury from stress, strain, and energy use. Then one morning while putting on a sock, your back painfully “gives.”

Shirokobrod often begins with patients by asking about recent emotional and psychological stressors. “The body doesn’t care where it’s using energy, it just knows it has a limit,” he said.

If you suspect your stress levels are getting out of hand, try altering your exercise routine. In my case, ahem, maybe managing “sandwich generation” care of children and elderly parents while working full time might not be the ideal season to train for a marathon. “Your body has to work harder to sustain its energy when you’re in overload,” Shirokobrod said.

Still, moderate exercise is a good tool for keeping stress in check. And surprisingly, said Shirokobrod, short sessions of high-intensity interval training (HIIT) can work. “Performing eight to 12 minutes of HIIT or short sprints on an exercise bike, recovering, and then going again for several sets will help your nervous system recalibrate,” he says. “You won’t hurt your tissues with these short bursts, but if you’re in central nervous system fatigue, your body will respond better than going for long, steady aerobic sessions.”

Exercise isn’t enough: Sleeping and eating well are crucial in dealing with allostatic overload. “Are you changing your eating habits due to stress and a busy schedule?” asks Shirokobrod. “Make an additive change to your diet, instead, eating more veggies, drinking more water, and getting enough nutrients.”

There’s more, of course: Try meditation, breath work, therapy, or prayer – anything that you find helpful. No equipment or expense, and little time investment. All you need is belief in the tool you choose.

Returning to Normal

Most of us can get through allostatic overload for short periods of time. This is especially true if you keep all your tools at hand – exercise in particular, said Dattilo. “When we exercise every day, we create a physical and emotional reserve that can help sustain us through stress and strain,” she said.

Also Read : Understanding Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) for Menopause: Benefits, Risks, and Alternatives

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