Let’s start off with the good news—massage is a great health aid that has been shown to reduce stress and its accompanying physical health threats. An Internet search on “effects of stress” supplied over 250,000 related articles, and most of the references in this issue are excerpted from the results. For instance: Under severe stress, when muscles are over-worked, the body shows any weakening symptoms such as soreness, stiffness, and even muscle spasms. Heightened stress responses accumulate lactic acid in the muscle and waste air inside the body. It exhausts the body and de-motivates the mind to remain energized and active.
Why Massage is Rejuvenating:
How Does Stress Affect Health?
The human body is designed to experience stress and react to it. Stress can be positive, keeping us alert and ready to avoid danger. Stress becomes negative when a person faces continuous challenges without relief or relaxation between challenges. As a result, the person becomes overworked, and stress-related tension builds.
Stress that continues without relief can lead to a condition called distress—a negative stress reaction. Distress can disturb the body’s internal balance or equilibrium—leading 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 also becomes harmful when people use alcohol, tobacco, or drugs to try to relieve their stress. Unfortunately, instead of relieving the stress and returning the body to a relaxed state, these substances tend to keep the body in a stressed state and cause more problems. Consider the following facts:
Stress Management The University of Washington, Department of Orthopedics, lists three components of a successful stress management program: learn how to reduce stress; learn how to accept what you cannot change; and learn how to overcome the harmful effects of stress.
Reducing Stress:
How Stress Makes Us Old
It’s long been suspected that a difficult life can make people look old before their time. New research shows that stress actually does age us prematurely — right down to our DNA.
Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, studied the DNA of 39 women who had spent years caring for their chronically ill children. They specifically examined the women’s telomeres, which are pieces of DNA that cap the ends of chromosomes and play a critical role in cell division. Each time a cell divides, the telomeres shorten; they therefore can serve as a marker of a cell’s biological age. The women with chronically ill children, the study found, had shorter telomeres than a group of women with healthy kids. The more stressed the woman, the greater the wear on her DNA. The difference was so dramatic that the researchers estimated that the cells of the highly stressed moms had undergone the equivalent of 10 years of additional aging compared to the low-stress group. “Older” cells, in turn, can be vulnerable to a host of diseases. “If we feel stress, it needs to be taken seriously,” Elissa Epel tells New Scientist. “It may be embodied at the cellular level.” — The Week, 12/04
Life today just seems to get busier and busier. It’s so easy to get swept up in all you have to do and to push yourself too hard. But how long can you ignore the effects of stress before it takes a noticeable toll on your health? Too many people spend much of their time focused on doing things for their family, work, etc. and put their personal welfare last. But ignoring your health can lead to more serious concerns than getting sick.
Reducing or eliminating stress from your life is a never-ending task. Can you think of any health therapy that can help you to de-stress faster or more effectively than a massage? Or one more enjoyable? Make your life the best it can be by including regular massage in your schedule!
home : services : gift certificates : products : specials : articles : contact
Website by Hot Fire Design
© Melting Touch Massage Therapy - All Rights Reserved