• Post category:StudyBullet-12
  • Reading time:6 mins read


Learn 200 ways to deal with stress – and help others

What you will learn

Identify the main causes of stress

Examine numerous healthy coping skills that deal with stress

Examine unhealthy coping skills – and avoid!

How to organise a Hygge week-end

The Instructor’s main methods to reduce stress

Description

Are you stressed?

Do you know others who are stressed?

This course is for you; it is for them – help others, help yourself.

Stress causes short AND long term harm.

Stress is the biological response to intrinsic or extrinsic stimulus.  This biological stress response involves interconnections among the nervous, endocrine, and immune systems. The two most well known stress-related biological mechanisms are:-

  • sympathetic arousal
  • activation of the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenocortical (HPA) axis.

The biological stress response involves interconnections among the nervous, endocrine, and immune systems.


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Distress (negative stress) can lead to physical symptoms including headaches, upset stomach, elevated blood pressure, chest pain, and problems sleeping. Research suggests that stress also can bring on or worsen certain symptoms or diseases.

Stress has been linked to illnesses that include cancer, lung disease, fatal accidents, suicide, and cirrhosis of the liver.

Other negative effects:

  • Long term disability
  • Weakens immune system
  • Ages you
  • Can ruin your heart
  • Can ruin your teeth and gums
  • Makes it difficult to control emotions

But…we can do a lot to reduce stress – hundreds of tips – and this is what the course (plus workbooks) is about!

You have lifetime access – we have different stresses throughout our lives – so there is no hurry as you work through the course.  In addition to the hundreds of tips we also explore specific recommendations from the Instructor.

Participation is encouraged throughout.

English
language

Content

Introduction

Overall Introduction

Coping with stress : 200 skills

Introduction
A few coping skills – part 1
A few coping skills – part 2
A few coping skills (again) part 1
A few coping skills again : part 2
Expansion – part 1
Expansion – part 2
Teens
Coping skills for the elderly – part 1
Coping skills for the elderly – part 2
Healthy coping skills
Unhealthy coping skills
Positive versus negative – pt 1
Positive versus negative – pt 2
Matching coping skills – pt 1
Matching coping skills – pt 2
Stress – pt 1
Stress – pt 2

Healthy v Unhealthy Coping Skills

Healthy skills – pt 1
Healthy skills – pt 2
Healthy skills – pt 3
Unhealthy coping skills
A game
Coping specifics – pt 1
Coping specifics – pt 2

Emotional management – and what is there to be done?

Emotional management
Checklist
Back to studies
Information overload – pt 1
Information overload – pt 2
So what is there to be done?
So what is there to be done – 2

Hygge Week-end

Start with Friday
Breakfast
Hot drinks
Go somewhere new
Nature/relaxation
Cooking/baking
Cocktail hour
Catch up with positive people/unplug
Slow cooking/spa
Pottering
Watch an old movie