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5 Ways to Keep on Track
Information overload is the new peril in daily project completion. It's easy to find yourself diverted, distracted, or simply bogged down with the tide of information that can arrive on your computer screen in the course of a working day. The...

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Recognizing and Treating the Symptoms of Depression
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Success Zone
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The Power of Positive Affirmations
Copyright © 2006 Jeff Griswold, Effective Learning Systems, Inc. To a large extent, your happiness and your success in life is determined by the thoughts you hold in your subconscious mind. Positive affirmations are powerful statements...

 
Stress Management By Relaxation

The method for stress management which I am going to show you below is actually a combination of two methods; a regular deep breathing exercise and Jacobsen's Progressive. Both are proven relaxation exercises and by combining them they function even better. These relaxation techniques can help you reduce tension in your muscles as well as manage the effects of the fight-or-flight response on your body - link when you feel you are about to get overwhelmed by panic. In a situation where you have to perform by thinking clearly under pressure, this relaxing exercise is really great. Here is what you do:

1. Sit down comfortably in a way that enables you to relax.

2. While you focus your body on relaxation take a series (10, 20 or even more) of deep breaths. For each breath you take, try to relax your body even more.

3. Tense up the muscles of both your hands maximally, make a fist and hold this tension for five seconds.

4. From the state of maximum tension, relax your hand's muscles to the state they were in before you tensed them.

5. Focus on your hand muscles and try to relax them even further so that you are as relaxed as possible.

6. Repeat step 3 to 5 but instead of your hands muscles, now concentrate on the following parts of your body in sequenze: your feet, your legs and tighs, your arms, your breast and stomach, your back and finally your neck and head's muscles.

The idea is that you'll probably be able to relax your muscles more by tensing them first, than you would if you just relaxed your muscles directly. You can also repeat the deep breathing steps in between the tensing / relaxation of the muscles of your different body parts.


About the Author: Terje Brooks Ellingsen is a writer and Sociologist who runs http://www.1st-self-improvement.net/. He writes about self help issues like self improvement, see http://www.1st-self-improvement.net/index.htm and relaxation exercises to stop smoking, see http://www.1st-self-improvement.net/stop_smoking.htm

Source: www.isnare.com

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