Title: Strategies to Cope with Stress and Manage Your Time
1Strategies to Cope with Stress and Manage Your
Time
- Sponsored by
- Office of the Provost
- Staff Development Committee
Presented by Leslie Z. Paige
2This photo of two identical dolphins was used in
a case study on stress level in a national
research study. Look at both dolphins jumping out
of the water. The dolphins are identical. A
closely monitored, scientific study of a
randomized group revealed that in spite of the
fact that the dolphins are identical, a person
under stress would find differences in the two
dolphins. If there are many differences found
between both dolphins, it means that the person
is experiencing a great amount of stress. Look at
the photograph and if you find more than one or
two differences you may want to take a vacation.
3(No Transcript)
4What is
STRESS ?
5Describe stressors
How do you know you are stressed??
6What is stress?
- Stress is natural
- Response to change - adjust to environment
- Very individual
- Can be physical and mental
- Perceived as positive or negative
7Stress - negative or positive?
- Depends on how we react
- Negative
- feelings of distrust, rejection, anger, and
depression - health problems such as headaches, upset stomach,
rashes, insomnia, ulcers, high blood pressure,
heart disease, and stroke - Positive
- can motivate us to action can result in a new
awareness and new perspectives.
8Acute stress
- Most common form of stress
- Highly treatable and manageable
- Causes may include
- demands and pressures of the recent past
- anticipated demands and pressures of the near
future
9Chronic stress
- Poverty, dysfunctional families, trapped in an
unhappy marriage or in a despised job or career. - Never see a way out of a miserable situation.
- Unrelenting demands and pressures for seemingly
interminable periods of time. - no hope, so give up searching for solutions.
- Suicide, violence, heart attack, stroke, and some
chronic diseases. - difficult to treat and may require extended
medical as well as behavioral treatment and
stress management.
10Stress Response
- The Alarm Reaction
- Stage of Resistance
- Stage of Exhaustion
- Hans Selye The Stress of Life
11Alarm Reaction
- Heart rate increases
- Respiratory rate increases
- Digestion ceases
- Hands and feet become cool
- Hair on arms may stand up
- Pupils dilate
- Blood pressure increases
12FIGHT
or
Flight
13Stage of Resistance
- Chronic release of cortisol
- Suppresses immune system
- Diseases of adaptation
- Prolonged stress with no relief may result in
disease and/or chronic health problems
14Stage of Exhaustion
- Corticoid production decreases
- Death
15General Adaptation Syndrome
Normal level of resistance to stress
16Nervous system
- Voluntary
- Involuntary (autonomic)
- Sympathetic
- Gets body ready for threat or stress
- Alarm Reaction!!
- Parasympathetic
- Helps with relaxation and rebuilding
- Decreases blood pressure, heart rate, increases
digestion - TIP Need to increase control of parasympathetic
system
17Mind and body connection
- Blushing
- Mental stimuli makes your skin change color
- Placebo effect works 28 -33
- Other examples?
18Tip
- calm the body
-
- calm the mind
- calm the mind
-
- calm the body
19What can you do?
- Deep breathing
- Biofeedback
- Progressive relaxation
- Meditation
- Self hypnosis
- Sound/music
- Exercise and massage
- Diet and Nutrition
- Autogenic Training
20Deep breathing
- Consciously slowing heart rate, decreasing
perspiration and relaxing muscles is more
difficult than simply slowing and deepening
breathing. - Breathing can be used to directly stimulate the
parasympathetic nervous system - results in relaxation and reverses changes from
the stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system
21Chest vs. abdominal breathing
- Put your right hand on your chest and your left
hand on your abdomen. As you breathe, see which
hand rises more. If your right hand rises more,
you are a chest breather. If your left hand rises
more, you are an abdomen breather. - Chest breathing is inefficient
- results in less blood flow, less oxygen transfer
to the blood and subsequent poor delivery of
nutrients to the tissues.
22Abdominal breathing
- Place one hand on your chest and the other on
your abdomen. Take a deep breath in, the hand on
the abdomen should rise higher than the one on
the chest. - Exhale through the mouth, take a slow deep breath
in through your nose and hold it for a count of 7 - Slowly exhale through your mouth for a count of
8. Gently contract your abdominal muscles to
completely push the remaining air from the lungs.
23Exhale twice as long as inhale
- Repeat 4 more times for a total of 5 deep
breaths and try to breathe at a rate of one
breath every 10 seconds (or 6 breaths per
minute). - To enhance, say to yourself the word,
relaxation when inhale and stress when
exhale - bring in the feeling/emotion you want with
inhalation and release those you don't want with
exhalation. - Deepen respirations not by inhaling more air but
- through completely exhaling it.
-
24Biofeedback
- Learn to control your involuntary nervous system
- Check your stress level!
25Biofeedback practice
- Warm fingers relaxed
- Try to consistently raise your temperature
- Practice at about the same time each day in a
calm setting - Transition to a more typical setting
- Pair with abdominal breathing
26Progressive Relaxation
- Involves tensing specific muscle groups and then
relaxing them to create awareness of tension and
relaxation. - It is termed progressive because it proceeds
through all major muscle groups, relaxing them
one at a time, and eventually leads to total
muscle relaxation. -
27Progress Relaxation Steps
- Get comfortable. Lie down loosen tight clothing,
close your eyes and be quiet. - Focus on yourself and on relaxing specific
muscles. - Tune out all other thoughts.
- Tense and relax each muscle group
- If any muscle remains tense, tighten and relax
that specific muscle 3 or 4 times. - Repeat as needed
28- Forehead - Wrinkle your forehead, try to make
your eyebrows touch your hairline for five
seconds. Relax. - Eyes and nose - Close your eyes as tightly as you
can for five seconds. Relax. - Lips, cheeks and jaw - Draw the centers of your
mouth back and grimace for five seconds. Relax.
Feel the warmth and calmness in your face. - Hands - Extend your arms in front of you. Clench
your fists tightly for five seconds. Relax. Feel
the warmth and calmness in your hands. - Forearms - Extend your arms out against an
invisible wall and push forward with your hands
for five seconds. Relax. - Upper arms - Bend your elbows. Tense your biceps
for five seconds. Relax. Feel the tension leave
your arms. - Shoulders - Shrug your shoulders up to your ears
for five seconds. Relax. - Back - Arch your back off the floor for five
seconds. Relax. Feel the anxiety and tension
disappearing. - Stomach - Tighten your stomach muscles for five
seconds. Relax. - Hips and buttocks - Tighten your hip and buttock
muscles for five seconds. Relax. - Thighs - Tighten your thigh muscles by pressing
your legs together as tightly as you can for five
seconds. Relax. - Feet - Bend your ankles toward your body as far
as you can for five seconds. Relax. - Toes - Curl your toes as tightly as you can for
five seconds. Relax.
29Other ways to manage stress?
30- Poor time management STRESS
- Reactive VS Proactive
31Time Management
- We cant manage time can only manage ourselves
- Time management me management
- We can manage what we do with the time we have.
32Time Bandits
Lack of focus Lack of training Junk
e-mail Surfing Procrastination Others?
- Disorganization
- Unclear goals
- Too many personal phone calls
- Disjointed processes
- No routines
- Poor planning
- .
33Time management tips
- Spend time planning and organizing
- Set goals which are specific, measurable,
realistic and achievable. - Prioritize
- Use a to do list
- Be flexible
- Do the right thing right
- Eliminate the urgent
34Time management
- Consider your biological prime time
- The art of intelligent neglect
- Avoid perfectionism
- Conquer procrastination
- Learn to say no
- Reward yourself
35Prioritize Responsibilities
- Immediate and important
- Close to a deadline, necessary
- Intermediate but not important
- Interruptions,not as significant
- Important but not immediate (goal 20)
- Relates to major responsibilities - will become
immediate and important if not started! - Maintenance
- Routine housekeeping - mail, filing, desk top etc
- Marginal -take up about 10 of jobs
- Redundant, can be eliminated or delegated
36Goal setting
- Goal
- Where you want to end up
- Strategy
- how you get there
- Tactics
- what you do when you get there
37- Eliminate clutter
- Set up systems that are easy to maintain
- Get organized
- Set long- and short-term goals and work on your
priorities - focus on the right things. - Evaluate processes so you can eliminate work
that doesnt need to be done or figure out a
better way to do it. - Become more proficient with technology if you
need it to do your work.
38Other strategies!
39Thank you for participating!
- Sponsored by
- Office of the Provost
- Staff Development Committee