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How to manage your stress more effectively - Shannon Odell

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The Science of Adolescence

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An upcoming project deadline, a fight with a family member, or even an embarrassing moment can easily trigger our body’s stress response. While we can’t always control what life throws at us, there are ways to better prepare for stressful events we may experience. So, how can we train our minds and bodies to manage our stress response? Shannon Odell shares best practices for dealing with stress.

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Stress and our body's response to it are a natural and inevitable part of life. Humans inherited this stress response through years of harsh environments and physical threats to our ancestors. Though often shortened to "fight or flight," the more response is actually more like "fight, flight, freeze or faint." This response relies on a system called the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, or HPA, which function to maintain physiological homeostasis.

The HPA regulates metabolism, immune responses, and the autonomic nervous system, and it begins to develop as early as the fetal stage! Challenges in the maternal environment can also create dysfunction in the fetal HPA development. The system is complex, releasing multiple hormones which regulate each other while regulating body processes.

Epinephrine, often referred to as adrienaline, is one of those hormones. This chemical messenger helps transmit nerve signals across nerve endings to dilate pupils, divert blood away from skin and to your muscles, encourage your heart to pump harder and faster, convert glycogen to glucose from your liver, and breathe deeper, delivering more oxygen to your blood.

While acute stress may spur on these positive changes, chronic stress can actually be immunosuppressive and damaging. Experts think that mindfulness, including amindful journaling practice, could help manage the difficulties that come with chronic stress. For more on mindfulness approaches and interventions, the work of David Creswell is compiled here.

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About The Science of Adolescence

The adolescent brain is spectacular! Between roughly the ages of 10 and 25, key connections are forming within the brain, between ideas, and between people. Understanding how this “connecting brain” works can help us facilitate positive development and make healthier decisions, enabling us to take advantage of the remarkable potential of these formative years.

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