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eLearning Series:
I've Got Way Too Much Stress!
I need stress relief now...
Laugh
Your Stress Away
Humor is a terrific stress-reducer and antidote to
all manner of upsets. It
has been clinically proven to be effective in combating the worst of stress.
Experts know that
a good laugh relaxes tense muscles, sends more oxygen into
your system, quicker and lowers your blood pressure.
So next time you
feel yourself start to tense up, tune into your favorite
comedy on television. Read a funny book. Call up a good friend
and laugh heartily for a few good minutes. It doesn’t even
hurt to just force a good laugh now and then. You'll find
your stress melting away with each breath!
Americans were
attracted to humor while reading the stories of Norman Cousins.
This man successfully overcame cancer by watching his favorite
comedy shows on television.
These days, you
can attend an organized humor meeting and even in places
such as India where laughing in a public place is frowned
upon.
Dr. Lee Berk,
along with fellow researcher Dr. Stanley Tan at Loma Linda
University School of Medicine, has taken up carefully controlled
studies that show the experience of laughter lowers serum
cortisol levels, increases the amount of activated T lymphocytes,
increases the number and activity of natural killer cells,
and increases the number of T cells that have helper/ suppresser
receptors.
This is powerful
evidence that laughter stimulates the immune system and this
off-sets the immunosuppressive effects of stress. Laughter
is powerful medicine!
Research has proven that laughter can lower cortisol levels and thereby protects
our immune system.
The emotions and
moods that we are all subject to directly effects our immune
system. It makes perfect sense, then, that when we cultivate
a mood of humor this allows us to perceive and appreciate
the everyday nuances of life through experiences of joy and
delight.
Such positive
states of mood and emotion creates neurochemical changes
that act to buffer the immunosuppressive effects of stress.
Stress research
pioneer, Selye, noted that a person's interpretation of stress
is not dependent only on an external event; it also depends
on the perception of the event and the meaning given to it.
This points to
the fact that we can learn to control our reaction to stress.
How we look at a situation, then, determines if we will respond
to it as a threat or as a challenge.
Humor gives us
an entirely different perspective on our problems. If we
can perceive it in a lighter frame, it is no longer a threat
to us. We have already discounted its effect by lightening
it. With such an attitude we serve to self-protect and so
control our environment.
**Bill Cosby coined an important phrase when he said, "If you can
laugh at it, you can survive it."
It's certainly very difficult to force a laugh while in a stressful situation.
However, that's precisely the time when you need to laugh the most. Remember,
the trick is to take control over your environment or situation. That way
you are more apt to feel challenged and less threatened.
Any way you can
slice it – lighten up and feel less stress. Calm over chaos
is the phrase of the day. Begin by trying to find humor in
the worst of situations. If you must, blow the situation
way out of proportion, just to make yourself laugh. Make
the serious look ridiculous. When you reach the point of
absurdity, you can then begin to melt and calm. Practice
makes perfect!
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