Thursday, January 25, 2024

Exercise for Stress Relief: What the Research Says

Stress is unavoidable in our busy modern lives. Work, family, relationships, our health, and the news about the world can all cause us to feel tense. Daily, persistent or chronic stress can lead to headaches, insomnia, upset stomach, muscle and joint pain, and even more serious symptoms like chest pain and high blood pressure. Stress is also a common cause of overeating and, even worse, we tend to make unhealthy food and drink choices when we’re tense or anxious.

You can’t totally eliminate stress from your life, but you can alleviate the symptoms. Exercise has been shown to reduce the effects of stress. Even better, “regular exercisers are more resistant to the emotional effects of acute stress, which in turn, may protect them against diseases related to chronic stress burden,” says a report in the journal Frontiers of Physiology.

How does exercise reduce stress? How much exercise do you need to do? What type of exercise is best? What are the keys to success? Here’s what the scientists who study it have found out.

Hormone Balance

woman doing yoga

Our bodies have a natural “fight or flight” response that help us react to stressful situations. Two hormones, adrenaline and cortisol, are released to prepare us to act when faced with an immediate threat. Those hormones raise your blood pressure and blood sugar levels, which in the short-term help you respond to the threat.

Persistently high levels of adrenaline and cortisone can turn those responses into serious health problems. According to Harvard Health, “Exercise reduces levels of the body’s stress hormones, such as adrenaline and cortisol. It also stimulates the production of endorphins, chemicals in the brain that are the body’s natural painkillers and mood elevators.”

By the way, when we laugh, our endorphins are increased why cortisol levels are decreased.

Rest Well

Worries and frustration make it hard for us to fall and stay asleep at night. When we don’t get enough sleep, we are groggy during the day and it disrupts the hormones that regulate our appetites.

Exercise leaves our bodies feeling tired so we’re more relaxed when we go to bed. “Exercise can also help to stabilize your mood and decompress the mind,” says John Hopkins Medicine. People who exercise regularly tend to sleep longer and more soundly, according to a study in the Advances in Preventative Medicine.

Better Self-Image

man exercising

Exercise has another important role to play in reducing stress when you’re trying to lose weight. Nutrisystem recommends 30 minutes of daily activity to keep your metabolism burning calories.

When you do your half-hour of exercise, you are sure to feel good about sticking to your commitment to losing weight and the progress you are making toward your goal. You can’t make all the other sources of stress go away, but you will feel better about your health.

Meditation Effect

For many people, focusing the mind on a specific thought pattern, or the practice of meditation, can chase the daily cares and worries out of their minds. Exercise can have a similar impact. As you move, your mind pays attention to what your body is doing and breaks you free of the stressful thoughts.

Exercises with a simple, repeated motion, such as walking, running, bicycling and swimming, are likely to put you in that meditative frame of mind. As you settle into the rhythm of your movement, you breathe more deeply and steadily, and your mind begins to relax.

You may also find rhythm in strength training, which includes lifting weights or working with resistance bands. Those kinds of exercises also have the benefit of helping your body turn fat into lean muscle, increasing your metabolism even when you are at rest.

Deep Stretching

woman stretching

Yoga is a series of movements or poses that are designed to relax your muscles and release tension in your body, so it can be effective at helping to manage the physical symptoms of stress.

The poses can seem intimidating if you’ve never tried yoga. However, many fitness clubs and community centers now offer classes in “gentle” or “chair” yoga that give you the stress-relief benefits without the challenging bending and stretching that you see more advanced students doing.

Tai chi is an ancient Chinese tradition that is now used for exercise. It blends rhythmic motion with stretching and balancing. Mayo Clinic calls tai chi a “gentle way to fight stress,” as it is used for stress reduction. “Often described as meditation in motion, tai chi promotes serenity through gentle, flowing movements,” they explain.

Fun Stuff

According to Mayo Clinic, “Even brief bouts of physical activity offer benefits. For instance, if you can’t fit in one 30-minute walk, try a few 10-minute walks instead.” Ultimately, the best kind of exercise is the kind you want to do. That includes activities that you might not normally think of as exercise but that get your body moving and your mind focused on positive thoughts.

Country line dancing, the foxtrot, disco, or any other kind of dance burns calories, releases endorphins, and helps you to relax. If you have kids around, playing games with them like tag or hopscotch will get you moving and is sure to put a smile on their faces and yours. That seems like the best of kind of stress relief.

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Going on week 5 of no weekday takeout!

F32, 5’0”, SW: 198 lbs, GW: 120 lbs, CW: 196 lbs

As title reads, I’m about to enter into my 5th consecutive week of no weekday takeout (I only do takeout on Saturdays).

This is in the midst of a serious food addiction surrounded by a lot of people who said I couldn’t do it and who looked at me with disgust. I hired a health coach who said I COULD do it and I haven’t looked back since.

She also has me strength training 3x per week. I also have PCOS and insulin resistance so things like HIIT and running are not great for my body type.

The weight hasn’t started to fall off yet but I’m not losing hope. Just cooking at home has been a HUGE turnaround for me that I’m so proud of. There’s been some miserable days where I really wanted takeout and I pouted all night about it, but I stuck to my guns.

A game changing piece of advice for me was “Not every meal needs to be an event” and that has really changed the way I view food.

What’s been a game changer for you in your weight loss journey?

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Wednesday, January 24, 2024

Anyone else feel like they didn't realize how heavy they really were until some of the weight started to come off?

I'm in this for the long haul. My intended weight loss period alone is all of 2024, and then maintaining indefinitely.

I'm down enough at this point to be able to see a real difference, and yet somehow I also see how far I have left to go. I think I just got so used to seeing myself at my heaviest that as the weight has started to come off, I'm noticing it more? Or something like that.

Well, one day at a time. It took a long time to get fat, it will take a long time to stop being fat. No shortcuts, no tricks, just the laws of physics and biology.

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Torture

I hate that weight loss is so slow. If you read a book for example, you can decide how much of it you'll read in a day. But you can't decide how much weight you'll lose. It also feels so incredibly unrewarding. When you read a book, you get the information or story you're interested in as you read it. When you're on a diet, you eat and then have to wait hours until you can see how much weight you lost, if any. Yes, I know, at some point it will pay off, but day by day, it's pure torture if you've been at this weight for years and you're chronically ill only because of your obesity.

I never quit a diet out of frustration and I'm not an emotional eater. It's just that 99 kg and 97 kg are equally as horrible to me. I still look like a monster at 97 and I'm still sick at 97. It makes no difference to me, and I can easily quit if I don't feel like I'm achieving anything.

Did anyone else go through this? What helped you?

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How to get 112g protein a day in one vegetarian meal?

Hey :)

I need some advice I’m new to weight loss ( the right way) and working out and am trying to figure out how to create a 1300 calorie diet ( I’d lose 0.5kg a week) that is lactose free and vegetarian.

I’ve always been a breakfast sometimes but mostly one big meal a day kind of person, and snack in between on fruits or chocolate or peanuts and raisins, and don’t really count calories. I just eat what’s good, but I’d like to be more intentional in my approach and so can anyone advise on meals or ways to get about 112g of protein a day in one meal?

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It’s Time

I’m a 31 year old male and just hit my heaviest at 402! I look big, but I do not look like I weigh 400 pounds.

I live a very busy life with a wife and 2 kids plus traveling 3 weeks out of the month for work.

Airports suck and usually result in a quick snack and from the hotel I door dash a lot.

I’ve really let myself go and lately I’ve been trying to start dropping off pounds by “just winging it”. Seems like any time you try to research weight loss you get 30 pages contradicting each other.

I just want an answer! I have a wife and kids and I want to live a long life to be there with them and for them as long as I possibly can as right now I don’t feel healthy at all. My brain, heart, gut, nothing feels healthy!

Anyone had real sustainable success that can help me save myself?!

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Tuesday, January 23, 2024

Sudden weight gain

So I’ve lost a bit of weight (130- 118lbs) steadily last year, but over the past few months the number on my scale hasn’t changed at all. When I was losing weight, I was eating between 1300-1700 cal’s each day.

I started to go to the gym a couple times a week and that’s when I started eating a bit more. I still ate the same foods I was eating before but at 1600-1700 cals. This was when it started. 2 weeks in and I gained 2 lbs, but I didn’t mind bc I was close to my goal weight (115lbs) and thought I could start building some muscle.

Two weeks went by, and a gained another 5lbs. Now I’m 125lbs, and started to get a bit concerned. Mind you that I was weighting everyday and the numbers were rising consistency, so it couldn’t have been just water. That’s when I went back to my old eating habits 1300-1700cals, still same foods.

Now it’s been over a month of consistent weight gain and it doesn’t seem to slow down. I then tried not going to the gym for a week to see if it was because of bloating or water from the exercises, but nope. Still gained. Some ppl also mentioned that I seem to have gained weight especially in my face and I kinda see it too.

l got sick last week and didn’t really eat or drink much for 2 days (maybe 900 cals). I stepped on the scale later and NOPE, it didn’t even budge.

I don’t understand how this is even possible, I would have to eat an extra 45500calories to gain all this weight. Even if it’s partially water weight, all the times I’ve overate I tracked it to be around 2500cals, and there weren’t many days where I went above my tdee. Even when I overate before at118lbs, the most I would gain the next day is 1-2lbs and it would come off a couple days later. My face is looking rounder and something tells me that it’s fat. I really hate lying to myself and I’ve made sure to track everything, condiments, veggies…etc.

Currently I’m 131lbs and wanna go back to maintaining 118lbs….idk what to do. Here are some extra info -I’m female -5’2 -18 -Currently experiencing some stress and lack of sleep bc of school -although I’m at a higher weight than when I started, I do look better than before because I have more muscular definition now. -consistent weight gain for almost 2 months -very slow weight loss process 6 months -also recently I’ve also been feeling bloated whenever I eat and I’ve found some clothes to be uncomfortable. -I don’t restrict food

Sry for such a long post and rant

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