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Are you doing all the wrong things to relieve stress? - Barking up the wrong tree

You know as well as I do THAT is not going to help.

9:23 AM May 12 2012

Eating and drinking have gotta be good for something.

10:02 AM May 12 2012

"The most effective stress-relief strategies are exercising or playing sports, praying or attending a religious service, reading, listening to music, spending time with friends or family, getting a massage, going outside for a walk, meditating or doing yoga, and spending time with a creative hobby."

I like the massage idea.

How about napping?

10:03 AM May 12 2012

Sleep is pretty much a cure-all but I do think it's good to get some of the more active stress-fighting strategies you quoted above in there as well.

10:08 AM May 12 2012

Does "surfing the Web" count as reading?

2:53 PM May 12 2012

I'm guessing no since they listed it under the ineffective strategies. It's a curious distinction though. I wonder if it's an issue of duration and engagement. My guess would be quickly skimming an article and moving on to the next one might be different from sustained involvement in a good book. Not sure. When you want stress relief switch from surfing the web on your iPad to reading a kindle book on your iPad. ;)

3:08 PM May 12 2012

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Or -- this is easier -- switch from iPad to Kindle where there's no temptation to do anything but read.

3:29 PM May 12 2012

"The least effective strategies are gambling, shopping, smoking, drinking, eating, playing video games, surfing the Internet, and watching TV or movies for more than two hours."

All of these activities are fun. They might not relieve stress, but they're still fun.

10:04 AM May 12 2012

Are you adding pleasure or decreasing stress? I think they're two different things. I often do those things while procrastinating and while they're fun, it doesn't really eliminate the worry that I should be doing something else. Maybe it's the difference between taking a shower and throwing on A LOT of cologne. :)

10:28 AM May 12 2012

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Adding pleasure brings on guilt, and guilt increases stress.

So you have to do something that doesn't make you feel guilty, to reduce stress.

That makes sense.

2:54 PM May 12 2012

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Do Facebook and Twitter fall under reading (good) or surfing the Internet (bad)?

6:25 PM May 12 2012

Methinks someone is trying to game the system. ;) My assumption is when they say reading, they mean books, but I don't know the details. I think Facebook and Twitter fall solidly in the Internet surfing area.

Perhaps the distinction is immersion? (technically an extreme version of engagement and comparable to flow though less active.)

6:48 PM May 12 2012

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See, I'm able to immerse myself in Facebook or Twitter. So many interesting things to read (and people to talk with)!

It's a serious question. I could see using Facebook and Twitter as good for stress ... Or bad!

7:14 PM May 12 2012

7:24 PM May 12 2012

Facebook has the capacity to make us lonely and miserable.

And yet, it is the single most popular application ever.

Why?

7:38 PM May 12 2012

Friends can lie, betray and disappoint us. Why have them? Nothing is just good or just bad.

And the most powerful addictions are often created by intermittent reinforcement. Sometimes you get a goody, sometimes you don't.

7:55 PM May 12 2012

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Not knowing whether I will get a goody, is a cause of stress.

So much for Facebook being stress relief!

10:31 PM May 12 2012

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