Stress Reduction

Tips for Reducing Stress

There are three keys to making the most of your time and energy: sleep, nutrition and breathe. 

Sleep

Sleep plays a role in your information intake! Sleep is your body’s way to strengthen the neural pathways, which means that you can recall things faster. Sleep also helps tune out the background information of your day and clear the way for your important points.

An effective study strategy is nightly review, study your notes just before you go to bed to help remember the learned material.

Nutrition

Eating is another key to effective studying. Your brain uses between 20 to 25 per cent of your daily energy, which means that college isn’t the time to drastically decrease your calorie intake. See if you can incorporate a variety of foods and increase the number of fruits and veggies in your diet.

It is also essential to eat breakfast as a student, as this sets the tone for how effectively your brain is able to work through the rest of the day.

Breathe

The third and final key is to breathe—something that we often need to remind ourselves to do. In times of stress, take five minutes to sit and breathe. Take certain points through the day or just before bed to sit and breathe.

See if you can count your breath and slowly make your way to inhale and exhale for 8 counts.

Practicing mindfulness

 

To practice mindfulness in our day to day lives, we must be aware of what we are thinking about at different points in the day and if it pertains significance to our current activity. Practicing mindful activities can help improve this awareness, as well as creating a focus on the activity you are doing. 

  1. Cat walk: Go for a walk outside and, without saying a word, count how many cats you can find. Pay attention to your surroundings and notice what you see. 

  2. Colouring/Mandala Art: Sit and colour quietly at different points in the day. Completely immerse yourself in this activity, thinking about nothing else. Move slowly and really think about what movements you are doing, or what colours you are choosing. 

  3. Meditation:  Set a timer for 5 minutes and sit with your eyes closed. Think about breathing in and out through your nose and try to keep as still as possible.  If a thought that isn’t relevant pops into your head, allow yourself to save it for later. Don’t punish yourself for not having a blank mind, the point of this exercise is to simply notice what thoughts arrive and if you can dismiss them. Unrelated thoughts will come into your focus, it is a part of being human, and you should be aware of your thoughts. 

 

Relaxation exercises

 

Research has shown that relaxation techniques are an effective way to reduce not only stress but many of the symptoms associated with mental health disorders.

Try these quick and easy techniques.

  1. Breathing Exercise: Place one hand on your abdomen right beneath your rib cage. Inhale slowly through your nose, drawing a deep breath into your lungs. Your chest should move only slightly, while your stomach rises, pushing your hand up. As you exhale, just let yourself go and imagine your entire body becoming loose and limp. It should take you twice as long to exhale as it does to inhale. Practice three times per day for two to three minutes.

  2. Progressive Muscle Relaxation: Pay a “mental visit” to your muscles, stopping at each area of the body from head to toe (or toe to head), paying attention to individual areas where tension exists. As you pause at each area, tense and relax each muscle, trying to release unnecessary tension. Spend a few more minutes on those areas that seem to be holding the most tension.

  3. Visual (Guided) Imagery: Imagine tension flowing out of your body from top to bottom. Visualize tension draining down your shoulders and arms and out through your fingertips into the air, down your thighs and legs, and out through the soles of your feet into the ground. It’s also helpful to take a mental “vacation,” imagining yourself in a pleasant, relaxing place such as on the beach or in the woods. This can be a place where you’ve been or a place you’d like to be. Take time to imagine the specific details of what you see, hear and feel in this place.

 

Mini mindful

 

Try this breathing technique to improve focus, calm down or prepare for a test:
 
  1. Hold your right hand as if you were giving a high five.

  2. Use your left pointer finger to trace the outside of your fingers.

  3. Use an inhale to slowly trace up the outside of the thumb, and an exhale to slowly trace down the inside edge.

  4. Repeat for all fingers.

  5. Say five positive things about yourself.