Stress Management Oscar Lama Article
7 Successful Stress Management Techniques
By Lyndsay Swinton
Everyone needs successful stress management techniques. Easy to learn and easy to
implement, you can use them for your own stress management or teach them to help others
manage theirs.
Manage your stress and be a healthier, happier and more pleasant person to be around. Let’s
cut to the chase…
1. Make stress your friend
Acknowledge that stress is good and make stress your friend! Based on the body’s natural
“fight or flight” response, that burst of energy will enhance your performance at the right
moment. I’ve yet to see a top sportsman totally relaxed before a big competition. Use
stress wisely to push yourself that little bit harder when it counts most.
2. Stress is contagious
Stressed people sneeze stress germs indiscriminately and before you know it, you are
infected with stress germs too!
Protect yourself from stress germs by recognising stress in others and limiting your
contact with them. Or if you’ve got the inclination, play stress doctor and teach them how
to better manage their stress.
3. Copy good stress managers
When people around are losing their head, which keeps calm? What are they doing
differently? What is their attitude? What language do they use? Are they trained and
experienced?
Figure it out from afar or sit them down for a chat. Learn from the best stress managers
and copy what they do.
4. Use heavy breathing.
You can trick your body into relaxing by using heavy breathing. Breathe in slowly for a
count of 7 then breathe out for a count of 11. Repeat the 7-11 breathing until your heart
rate slows down, your sweaty palms dry off and things start to feel more normal.
5. Stop stress thought trains
It is possible to tangle yourself up in a stress knot all by yourself. “If this happens,
then that might happen and then we’re all up the creek!” Most of these things never happen,
so why waste all that energy worrying needlessly?
Give stress thought-trains the red light and stop them in their tracks. Okay so it might go
wrong – how likely is that, and what can you do to prevent it?
6. Know your stress hot spots and trigger points
Presentations, interviews, meetings, giving difficult feedback, tight deadlines…My heart
rate is cranking up just writing these down!
Make your own list of stress trigger points or hot spots. Be specific. Is it only
presentations to a certain audience that get you worked up? Does one project cause more
stress than another? Did you drink too much coffee?
Knowing what causes you stress is powerful information, as you can take action to make it
less stressful. Do you need to learn some new skills? Do you need extra resources? Do you
need to switch to de-caffeinated coffee?
7. Eat, drink, sleep and be merry!
Lack of sleep, poor diet and no exercise wreaks havoc on our body and mind. Kind of
obvious, but worth mentioning as it’s often ignored as a stress management technique.
Listen to your mother and don’t burn the candle at both ends!
Stress Management Oscar Lama Article