Rethinking Stress

Posted on in Brain Health, Healthy Lifestyle, Mindset by Dr. John Kim

We all experience stress.

It’s inevitable.

It’s a part of life and part of being human.

While some of us may experience more stress than others, one thing is certain…

We can’t simply ignore those things that bring add stress in our daily lives.

The question is:

How can we increase our body’s ability to handle the stress, and make stress actually work for us and not against us?

Here’s 5 ways you can help adapt to stress and reduce it’s detrimental effects on your body.

1. Been there, done that.

The fact that you’re reading this right now means that you’ve survived and gotten through every single stressful event before today.

You have done this before, and you will do this again.

Each time you experience stressful events your body will start to learn how to respond.

It learns to cope.

It adapts.

2. Turn a negative into a positive

You’ve always heard the saying, “turn that frown, upside down.”

Rather than think about how your palms are sweaty, (knees weak, arms are heavy) think about how those physical reactions to a stressful situation relate to your body’s ability to help you get through the current situation.

Appreciate that your body has the capability to help you get through whatever life is trying to throw at it. That’s pretty extraordinary.

Viewing your body’s changes to stress as purposeful rather than debilitating can make all the difference in how you come out of whatever life is throwing your way.

3. Move more.

Your body’s stress pathways are intimately tied to your movement pathways.

When you move more, you turn up the body’s auto regulatory systems and turn down the negative effects of stress.

4. Focus on what you can control vs can’t control – 2 islands.

Here’s an exercise that helps – on a sheet of paper create two islands.

On one island write down everything that you don’t have control over, and on the other island write down everything you do have control over.

What island do you think you should live on?

5. Get your spine and nervous system checked.

chiropractic can help headaches

Stress shuts off the part of your brain, called the pre-frontal cortex, which is responsible for logical thinking and reasoning.

Have you ever felt like you’re unable to think clearly when you’re experiencing stress? That’s because your Limbic System is shut off.

Corrective Chiropractic has been shown to improve the pre-frontal cortex and turn on the calming part of our nervous system allowing you to cope and relax better.

How do you cope with stress?

Dr. Kim was born and raised in Toronto and attended high school at St. Michael’s College School. Later, he attended McMaster University and received a Bachelor of Kinesiology, the scientific study of human movement. After university, Dr. Kim decided to enroll at Palmer College of Chiropractic, in Davenport, Iowa, in the United States. After graduating in 2002, Dr. Kim remained in the United States working alongside highly respected Chiropractors in the Chicago area. Shortly thereafter, Dr. Kim established Kim Family Chiropractic in Milton, Ontario

Kim Family Chiropractic

180 Ontario St S
Milton, ON L9T 2M8