60 Tips for a Stress-Free Lifestyle (part 4)   

Posted in Emotional Intelligence, Health & Wellbeing, Parenting
by Ronit Baras on June 27th, 2008

Welcome to the 4th part of the series "60 Tips for a Stress-Free Lifestyle". I hope the tips from the previous posts were helpful for you. Remember, all you need is 3-4 tips that will make the difference in your life.

Tip #31 - Time for everything

When you do something, focus on doing it. When you eat - eat! When you take a shower - shower, and when you read a book - read a book. When you are on holiday - have fun and focus on having a good time. When you enjoy something and do it 100% instead of doing too many things at the same time, you can significantly decrease your levels.

Tip #32 - Play Pollyanna often

Pollyanna was a little girl who invented the most beautiful game. Whenever something went wrong, she talked about all the good things she still had. Pollyanna was the ultimate optimist - she used to count her blessings all the time, but especially after something had happened that was particularly bad. So whenever something happens that you are not happy about, play Pollyanna and count your blessings.

Tip #33 - Ask questions

Young woman smiling

There are answers on the other side of questions. If you ask questions, you increase the information available to you before you make a decision. When you have a problem, imagine yourself solving a puzzle, in which every question helps you add one more piece to your 'life puzzle'.

Tip #34 - Learn to say "No"

Many people find it hard to say "No" to things they cannot or do not want to do. This feeling of "I have to do this" creates a lot of . If you say "No", you might lose the other's friendship, but if you say "Yes", you lose respect for yourself. Remember, in the battle between your respect for others and your respect for yourself, YOU should always be the winner. Practice saying "No" when you are asked to do an extra job or when are invited to an event that you do not have the time or the energy for. It is far less stressful in the long run.

Tip #35 - Exercising

Exercising is an excellent cure for . You can pick any physical activity you like and be active. You can choose a fun sport (like ballroom dancing), a soft sport (like Yoga) or a high-energy sport (like boxing). Any sport that gets you moving is good. Many people say they do not have time to go to the gym or the money for a personal trainer, but the truth is, you do not need to go to the gym or have to have a personal trainer. You can just use your kids' skipping rope, walk around the block or hike on the weekend.

Tip #36 - Take stretch breaks every hour

Man sitting on bench eating a sandwichSitting for a long time in one place can create tension. Be conscious of this and stretch once every hour. Go to the toilet, get a drink or say hello to your colleagues in another room. 2-3 minutes of stretching can mean the difference between a stressful and an un-stressful day.

Tip #37- Find a place to relax

Relaxing is a great way to ease your . Find a place at home that you can sit down and feel the tension melt away. It can be in the bath, in your bed, in a hammock on your balcony or in your garden. If you do not have such a place at home, create one and use it daily.

Tips #38 - Always take a lunch break

Even if you finish your lunch in 3 minutes, take a lunch break. You need the time off to think properly. Go for a walk if you have the time. Do not sit at your desk and eat at the same time. Lunch is meant to get some sugar into your system and to help you rejuvenate for a short time, so use this time effectively.

Tip #39 - Yoga

SaladYoga is an excellent way to relax. If you can register yourself to take a course, great! If you cannot, get a book from the library or search on the Internet for simple yoga techniques to help you relax. The simplest part of Yoga is the breathing technique. Everyone can do this, and it is short and simple. Inhale through your nose to the count of eight. Exhale slowly to the count of 16. Repeat 10 times.

Tip #40 - Have your own deadlines

If you have to submit something and you have a deadline, always have a personal deadline, which takes into consideration "UPEs" (UnPlanned Events). If you have to submit an assignment in 3 weeks, plan to finish it in two weeks. Even when you think you will have plenty of extra time, give yourself a time buffer. It is better to have extra time to improve than run out of time and feel stressed.

Previous chapters in this series:

60 Tips for a Stress-Free Lifestyle (part 1)

60 Tips for a Stress-Free Lifestyle (part 2)

60 Tips for a Stress-Free Lifestyle (part 3)

More tips for a -free coming up in part 5. Come back to read it or subscribe via RSS or email.

Have a -free life,
Ronit

Please tell your friends about our great content

  • E-mail this story to a friend!
  • StumbleUpon
  • Digg
  • MySpace
  • Facebook
  • del.icio.us
  • Google Bookmarks
  • LinkedIn
  • Live
  • Technorati
  • Twitter

Related posts

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

Ronit Baras is a life coach, public speaker, journalist and author, living in Brisbane. She coaches couples, parents and kids and delivers powerful, inspiring presentations and workshops on winning attitude, wealth mindset and parenting.

5 Comments to “60 Tips for a Stress-Free Lifestyle (part 4)”

  1. Yoga Techniques From Around The Web » Blog Archive » 60 Tips for a Stress-Free Lifestyle (part 4) | June 27th, 2008 at 8:57 AM

    [...] View original post here: 60 Tips for a Stress-Free Lifestyle (part 4) [...]

  2. Family Matters » Blog Archive » 60 Tips for a Stress-Free Lifestyle (part 5) | July 4th, 2008 at 8:25 PM

    [...] 60 Tips for a Stress-Free Lifestyle (part 4) [...]

  3. Family Matters » Blog Archive » 60 Tips for a Stress-Free Lifestyle (part 6) | July 11th, 2008 at 8:11 AM

    [...] 60 Tips for a Stress-Free Lifestyle (part 4) [...]

  4. herbalife | April 10th, 2009 at 8:04 PM

    Stress is a biological term which refers to the consequences of the failure of a human or animal body to respond appropriately to emotional or physical threats to the organism, whether actual or imagined. It is "the autonomic response to environmental stimulus."

  5. Ronit Baras | April 11th, 2009 at 1:50 PM

    I agree!
    I think the focus here is on "Emotional" and " imagine"
    I believe that over time the definition of threat changed. If 1000 years ago, starvation was a threat, today, not having enough sugar for 3 hours is a threat to people and in a panic reaction they take a candy or a Cookie.
    Today, we live in a stressful society because many people think that:
    It is a threat if I am not comfortable
    It is a threat if I am hungry
    It is a threat if people do not think like me
    It is a threat if life is not happening exactly as I want
    It is a threat if I need to make an effort
    It is a threat if I do not succeed on first try
    It is a threat if I someone said something nasty to me

    and the list is huge.

    As someone who lived in a place full of wars, sometimes I wonder if people lived in a place with life threat, they would think differently about their emotional and imagined threats

    Happy day
    Ronit
    Personal Growth

Have Your Say

We welcome your contribution with your valuable comment
(pure self promotion will be flagged as spam and deleted).

Comments links could be nofollow free.


 

FREE Personal Development E-course

Get 7 Personal Growth Tips Every 7 Days for 7 Weeks

Free Personal Growth E-course

Sign up for the FREE to the Seven, Seven, Seven personal development e-course to receive 7 tips, 7 times, every 7 days and achieve success in your parenting, your attitude, your relationships, your family matters, your finances, your career and your spiritual development.

Every seven days for seven weeks, you will receive seven practical tips that will contribute to your personal growth as a parent.

Topics covered:

  • Goal setting
  • Positive attitude
  • Powerful language
  • Ways to say I love you
  • Healthy habits
  • Responsibility
  • Wealth mindset

The e-course will be sent to you once a week, just on time before the last one fades and you slowly slide into old habits.

If you enjoy the free information available on this site, you are sure to appreciate this opportunity to receive your free e-course.

Sign up right here:

Name
Email

Note: You can easily unsubscribe at any time with no hassle - just click the cancellation link at the bottom of any email. Your privacy is important to us and we reassure you that your email address will be kept confidential and will not be shared. If you use a spam-blocker on your email account, be sure to add the email domain ronitbaras.com to your whitelist, so the e-course is allowed through.


 
How to Be Happy in Life?
 
Visit www.BeHappyInLife.com Now
and Find Out!