How To Relax
By Mark Stibich, Ph.D., About.com
Updated: November 24, 2008
Herbert Benson and his group at the Mind-Body Medical Institute have been studying the relaxation response since the 1970s and have linked its use to reductions in high blood pressure. The idea is simple: just as the body responds to certain cues and situations with a stress response, it can also respond a relaxation response. With 20 minutes a day, you can learn to use the relaxation response to reduce stress and to improve blood pressure.
Difficulty: Easy
Time Required: 20 minutes a day
Here's How:
Sit
Find a comfortable place to sit. Sit with you back straight and feet on the floor. Be comfortable, but alert.
Close your eyes
Just relax. Close your eyes. Let everything fall away.
Breathe in
Breathe in through your nose. Feel the breath fill your body.
Breathe out
Exhale through your nose. Feel your body collapse. Breathe out fully.
Repeat
Continue breathing. After each time your breath in and out, say (or think) the word “One”. Continue for 20 minutes. You can change the word to anything meaningful for you.
Practice daily
Repeat this everyday. Have a set time to do it. Don’t worry about setting an alarm, just have a clock nearby that you can see. If you start drifting in thought, gently return to your breathing.
Mini-relaxations
During your day, stop a few times and ‘do a mini’. Just breath in and out for about a minute. This will relax you and begin to teach your body how to respond to stress in a calm way.
What You Need:
Place to sit
20 uninterrupted minutes
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