The Therapy Guy
The Therapy Guy
How To Deal With Stress and Anxiety
Have you been dealing with stress or anxiety recently? As a therapist, we see many clients come in feeling stressed about work, school etc or anxious about an upcoming event, project, deadline.
Everyone feels overwhelmed at some point in their lives, but it's learning how to deal with stress and anxiety that will make the difference for your mental health and wellbeing.
We've included some breathing techniques and a suggestion for dealing with panic attacks etc
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Hi.
Welcome to the therapy guy.
My name is Alan and today I'm going to give you
some tips for dealing with anxiety and stress and helping you
obviously understand how you can cope and what you can do
for yourself to try to manage those feelings.
There's lots of different information you
can get on the internet.
Please be aware that even the advice that I'm giving you
now, because it's going out to everybody, it has to be
fairly generic, it has to be aimed at everybody.
So it may not work specifically for you.
At the start.
What I'd like you to do is almost try to
change the techniques that you may read on things like
Google or different websites and even the ones that I
give you to yourself and your own circumstances.
There's lots of things that you can do.
There's lots of things that help different people, but
the things that help your partner or your friend
or anybody else may not specifically help yourself.
So just be aware it's not you.
It's not because your stress and anxiety is worse.
It's just because we are all different
and different things work for us all.
It's no different to exercising.
Some people like to play football, some people
want to play golf, some people run.
Some of it will cycle.
The end result is still the same.
The fitness is there, the enjoyment is there, but
it's just a different way of getting there.
What is stress, anxiety?
How can it affect us?
There are so many different physical ways that stress
and anxiety can affect us that I'm just going
to give you a few I'm just going to
give you some things that maybe you can notice.
Some things you may not be aware of.
It can be things like headaches, back pain, neck pain.
We hold a lot of tension in our body when we're
stressed and anxious, so we may sit a bit differently, we
might stand a bit differently because of this tension.
We may be a bit stiffer, so we can feel this
discomfort in our back, in our neck, and even other areas.
We can get chest pains, which may also be
something to do with us breathing too fast and
not getting us enough oxygen into our bloodstream.
Can also be things like problems with digestion,
getting acid reflux, nausea, shaking, sweating, some dizziness,
and sometimes some tingling or numbness in our
fingers or our face or anything else.
And again, some of these things can be due to
us not getting the oxygen we need in our bloodstream
because we're in this fight or flight response.
Now, some of the emotional things that we can
sometimes think and feel is we can find ourselves
being more irritable, we can find ourselves getting angry
easier, more frustrated with the smaller things.
We can find ourselves crying at random times
over things that we wouldn't normally cry about.
Obviously be really impatient sometimes this
can lead us to decrease productivity
so you may find that work slows down
your output, your enthusiasm for doing things like
going to the gym or being with friends.
You may find that you struggle to think
you have all these thoughts going around in
your mind because you're stressed, anxious.
You haven't really then got the thoughts.
The spare capacity in your brain to concentrate on work
or other things that can lead to us forgetting things,
dates, appointments and people say oh I'm forgetful.
It may be an indication that you've just got a
lot going on for you at that time and your
brain is just trying to prioritise some of the thoughts
and the things that are happening to you eventually this
can lead to us burning out.
Now there's quite a lot of different things, different
ways that people express and what it is about
burning out for me it's really about obviously just
losing all that enthusiasm, that drive to get up
and do the things that we normally do.
I like going to work, seeing
friends, eating and looking after ourselves.
We just lose everything for us and we just start to
give up on things and it is really the extreme end
of where our anxiety and stress can lead us emotionally.
But the physical impacts that it can
have on us too are immense.
I read an article the other day which would
suggest that 40% of the physical symptoms that people
go to the doctors for now are stress related.
So as I said earlier, the bad back, the
neck pain, that sort of thing, it can be
an indication that you're just really stressed.
So what can you do about things?
What can you do on a very basic level?
So some generic and general tips would be you
could try to talk to someone who you trust.
Now what I would try to do is find someone
who is there and not going through too much themselves.
We don't want you just obviously listening
and colluding with the other person about
how bad each other's lives are.
We want someone who is reasonably good place, which
is why talking to a therapist often helps.
Not only are they impartial, but they're there and
they've been trained specifically to manage their own feelings,
obviously not bring them into the room with yourself
which is why a lot of people find that
they can talk to a therapist more easily.
We can try to look after
our physical wealth doing this.
That doesn't involve necessarily going to the gym,
it could involve just you going out for
a walk, you eating regularly, eating what you
can as healthily as possible.
We can soon start to notice our diet changing.
We find we eat more sugary stuff or
quick fixed foods, things that gives us energy.
Because when we're stressed and anxious, your
brain uses a lot of energy.
So we instantly fix the sugar stuff.
The things that will give us that feel good factor that
we need just to pick us up and keep us going.
We can try some breathing exercises and I'm going
to give you one or two of them in
a minute just to help you through them.
We'll get some details about that just in a while.
Keep a diary.
And what I would say on this diary is don't
just write down the bad stuff, but write down some
things that you've got right or things that have gone
well for you in the same sort of context.
So if you write half a page of things,
thoughts and feelings about negative stuff, try to look
for some things that you've got right.
So I managed to get out of bed and go to work.
Now part of your brain says, well, you should be
doing it anyway, but you still manage to do that.
You've got up even though you're feeling
this way, you still were strong enough
to put yourself into that position.
You can try complementary and alternative
therapies. People find getting massages, aromatherapy.
All this can help because we're all so different.
As I spoke about earlier, different
things work for different people.
And remember, if one thing doesn't
work, please try something else.
If you go to a therapist and you don't like them,
or the way that they help you and support you isn't
working for you, first thing I try to encourage you to
do is talk about it with the therapist.
The second thing I'd ask you to do is find
somebody else, try somebody different, but learn from that experience
and ask the next therapist questions about how they work
so you get the support that you need.
If we go back to the breathing techniques,
just briefly, there is really big one that
I really promote, and you may have heard
of it, it's called 7 11 breathing technique.
Now it's a really powerful technique for helping
people reduce the feelings of stress and anxiety.
But like anything else, it needs a bit of practise.
What people tend to do is just basically use it when
they actually feel the stress or anxiety is at its peak.
It can be really difficult to focus then on
trying to do that, trying to use that skill.
So what I normally encourage my clients to do
is to practise it when they're feeling okay.
Practise it when they're watching the TV or
stuck in a traffic jam or the red
lights or something in short little easy bursts.
So that the skills are there
And you're already preparing yourself for
if and when you need it.
How does it work?
Well, if you think about it, our
breathing controls how we think and feel.
If you breathe more quickly, you can
become more excited and more anxious.
If we breathe more slowly, we can
feel more relaxed and in control.
If you think about it, when you go to
sleep nighttimes, you end up breathing more slowly.
You don't end up breathing rapidly as
if you were if you're watching an
exciting movie or running or anything else.
7 11 technique basically revolves around you breathing in
to the count of seven and then breathing
out to the count of eleven.
It's important to try to do this as slowly
as possible, but it can be quite big.
Those numbers are quite large for when you start.
The important thing here to remember, it's not
so much the numbers, it's the routine.
You breathe out for longer than you breathe in.
So you could do breathe in for the count of
five and you breathe out for the count of eight.
Whatever is comfortable for yourself, really.
The indication is no different too.
Like if you went to the gym, you
wouldn't be able to run a marathon.
As soon as you go through or lift heavy
weights, you have to build up to that.
So if you start with the lower numbers
and then start to build up working towards
the 7 11 breathing, then you'll find it easier.
Remember, the thing to do is make sure
that the outbreath is longer than the in.
If you even think of the words, in is a
shorter word, and out, it's an easy way to remember.
Try to practise it maybe three to five times a day.
It helps, as I said, if
you attach it to something else.
So if you're having your first drink
in the morning, try some breathing exercises.
If you're watching TV and an advert comes on, then
try breathing exercises for maybe one or two minutes.
The more frequently you practise
this, the easier it becomes.
And you can email me and I can send you a worksheet
with all this information on and it will help you say I
always tell my clients to take a photo of it so that
then they've got it with you, it's on your phone.
We don't leave our phones anywhere nowadays.
So if it happens and the anxiety or stress is
getting too much and you forget you already have it
on your phone here for you to do.
Or of course, you can listen to
this podcast again, which should be fantastic.
There are lots of different ways that you
can help with just reducing your stress, and
that breathing technique is just one of them.
Another thing that I use is sort of mental exercises.
These work really well for myself because it's how
I think and feel and it really works with
how my brain sees things and does things.
So what I might do is if I can feel
myself starting to get anxious, I might start to name
all the things I can see around me.
So you just scan your environment at any
point and you just see the different things.
Try to notice something different
that you haven't seen before.
You can sometimes count backwards, so you might
like, start at 100 and count backwards.
I don't know, in seven or eight.
So you go 93 or 92.
Whatever it is that you decide is the number you
want to go back, but you drastically reduce that thing.
You might pick an object and describe
it in your mind in detail.
You might look for every way.
It's a mindfulness technique that I use for my clients.
I ask them to describe every single detail
about a pen that I give them.
If you pick up everything, it could be your phone,
it could be your iPad, it could be your computer.
Just look for every single detail about how
it's manufactured, the colours, the textures, everything that
you can see on that item.
Try to read things or spell your
name or name of other people.
Try and spell them backwards.
Doing these different mental challenging exercises can change
what area of the brain that we're using.
So we change from the emotional side of the
brain to the rational, practical side of our brain.
And it helps us then to obviously change the
way that we're thinking and distract us away from,
obviously, the anxiety and stress that we can feel.
Other things you can do is you can name all
the movies that you've ever seen or all the music
that you like, all the songs that you can remember.
Try to do these things.
Mix and match it.
Now, another technique that you can adapt is something
that works really well for people experiencing panic attacks
or PTSD, and it's called the 54321 technique.
Now, this is really about looking at your surroundings.
It's really about trying to bring you away from
that stress and those feelings that are overwhelming you
at that time and bring you back into the
room that you're in, wherever it is.
So what I would do there is
five things that you can see.
So look for the small details, look for maybe
the smallest objects that you can see in the
room, but name five of them, cheque them out.
Five things you might not have seen before in the room.
Four things you can feel.
Now, if you look at it, it might be your phone,
it may be the clothes you're wearing, the table you're sat
at, the chair you're sat on, anything in your environment.
Four different textures that you can feel.
Three things that you can hear.
So it could be your breathing, it could be
the traffic going by, the wind, the rain.
There could be lots of things.
Any music you can put some music on
in the background, that sort of stuff.
Two things that you can smell.
This can be even more difficult, obviously,
because it depends on where you are
and what you're doing in that time?
Well, it may be stuff like the fresh air or an
air freshener in an office or a house, the grass, it
may be food or smell, some restaurants as you're walking through.
And then one thing that you can taste.
So one thing that I try to encourage people who are
having these sort of flashbacks, these panic attacks, is that they
carry some mints or some chewing gum, things like that, in
their pockets, on their person, so that when they start to
do that, they can actually taste it.
It's always something that you can smell too, so it's
always something you can feel and something you can see.
So it ticks some of those boxes.
If you just get out that piece of sweets
or that chewing gum, whatever it is that you're
carrying around for yourself, give me something healthy.
Of course, some of these things you need to
adapt and you need to work with them.
So practise them.
They won't always work unless you adapt them
to how you think and feel and the
support and experiences that you're having right now.
Try them, use them, keep doing, practising them
three, four or five times a day.
Attach them to something else.
Even the 54321 technique, you can just run through
it in your mind, you can use it.
It doesn't have to be experiencing what a
trauma or an anxiety or panic attack.
You can just get used to doing
the sequence when you're feeling calm.
So that it's there as a skill ready
for you when you need it most.
As always, if you need any advice, any guidance,
any more information, please don't hesitate to contact me.
I'll be happy to hear from you, I'll be
happy to send you any information that I've got
and point your right direction for more information or
more support that could help you.
I'd like to thank you for listening for today.
I'm going to sign off and I hope you
tune in next time for going to have some
meditation podcast come up so that hopefully help you
with mindfulness and help you with your sleep.
But for today, I'm going to sign off as a therapy guy.
Stay safe and look after each other.
Bye for now.
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