Stressed? If so, know that you are far from alone. Persistent feelings of strain, tension and overwhelm are rife in the UK, and only continue to grow amidst a cost-of-living crisis. According to YouGov and The Mental Health Foundation, 74% of the UK say they feel so stressed that they’re unable to cope.

Of course, at the root of this are deep, systemic issues: problems around our work culture and entrenched inequality, to name just two.

As such, it's time to talk about coping strategies to reduce stress that are accessible, free and truly have the power to help you in times of acute stress.

In a their book Burnout: The secret to solving the stress cycle (RRP £16.99), identical twins Dr Emily Nagoski and Dr Amelia Nagoski – who have a PhD in Health Behaviour and a Doctorate in Musical Arts between them – argue that we lead lives humming with stress, but we never complete the 'stress cycle.' Cracking this, they say, is the key to unlocking ourselves from our hyped up cages and into greater mental clarity.

how to destress - women's health uk
Emily and Amelia Nagoski

What is a stress cycle?

It's the moment at which our bodies learn that, after facing danger, we are now safe: the completion of the full circle of stress.

Let's illustrate this by taking it back to the old school. When our ancestors swerved some threat, say, being chased by a tiger, they might have achieved their survival by running away to their village. Here, the resident muscle maybe threw a few spears at the animal and slays it. Everyone jumps, cheers and celebrates. Woo! In this moment, for the runner away-er, the stress cycle is tied up.

Burnout: The secret to solving the stress cycle

Burnout: The secret to solving the stress cycle

Burnout: The secret to solving the stress cycle

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Take a modern equivalent. You receive a 'breaking news' notification on your phone on Friday evening that cases of Covid-19 are going back up.

Your cortisol and adrenaline spike. Your body enters fight or flight. It chooses flight, and commands that you bolt to safety somewhere far away, where terrifying changes can't get you. Apart from, of course, you don't. You scroll your phone for whatever information you can find, panic eat half a pack of biscuits and try and distract yourself with Netflix.

The problem? You've not completed the stress cycle. As the Nagoskis note, when this happens on the daily, your stress response is in chronic activation.

This is not good. It means lit up blood pressure (AKA an increased chance of heart disease) as well as digestion that's been played with (the stress response slows your gut function down, so that you can put all of your energy into running or fighting).

Topline: completing the stress cycle – and thus taking yourself out of the stress response – is a serious imperative for your health.

Here, extracted from their book, is the sisters' suggestions of finishing the cycles off. As most of us experience a stressor at least once a day, they prescribe that you commit to doing at least one of these, ideally more, every 24 hours, too.


    How to de-stress: 7 ways to complete the stress cycle

    1.Move

          Running, dancing, swimming, whatever: the Nagoskis note that exercise is 'your first line of attack in the battle against burnout.' Aim for 20 to 60 minutes a day.

          2. Breathe

          'Deep, slow breaths down-regulate the stress response—especially when the exhalation is long and slow and goes all the way to the end of the breath, so that your belly contracts,' write the Nagoskis.

          'A simple, practical exercise is to breathe in to a slow count of five, hold that breath for five, then exhale for a slow count of ten, and pause for another count of five. Do that three times—just one minute and fifteen seconds of breathing— and see how you feel.'

          You could also try the 4-7-8 breathing technique, if you struggle to sleep.

          3. Talk to people

          'Casual but friendly social interaction is the first external sign that the world is a safe place,' say the Nagoskis.

          'Just go buy a cup of coffee and say 'nice day' to the barista. Compliment [your colleagues] earrings [via Zoom.] Reassure your brain that the world is a safe, sane place, and not all people suck.'

          4. Laugh

          'Laughing together—and even just reminiscing about the times we’ve laughed together—increases relationship satisfaction. We don’t mean social or 'posed' laughter, we mean belly laughs—deep, impolite, helpless laughter.

          'When we laugh, says neuroscientist Sophie Scott, we use an 'ancient evolutionary system that mammals have evolved to make and maintain social bonds and regulate emotions.'

          Text, Product, Pink, Circle, Font, Line, pinterest icon
          Issy Muir

          5. Speak to loved ones

          'When friendly chitchat with colleagues doesn’t cut it, when you’re too stressed out for laughter, deeper connection with a loving presence is called for. Most often, this comes from some loving and beloved person who likes, respects, and trusts you, whom you like, respect, and trust,' say the Nagoskis.

          'It doesn’t have to be physical affection, though physical affection is great; a warm hug, in a safe and trusting context, can do as much to help your body feel like it has escaped a threat as jogging a couple of miles, and it’s a heck of a lot less sweaty.

          'One example of affection is the 'six-second kiss' advice from relationship researcher John Gottman. Every day, he suggests, kiss your partner for six seconds.

          That’s one six-second kiss, mind you, not six one-second kisses... six seconds is too long to kiss someone you resent or dislike, and it’s far too long to kiss someone with whom you feel unsafe.'

          6. Cry

          'Anyone who says 'crying doesn’t solve anything' doesn’t know the difference between dealing with the stress and dealing with the situation that causes the stress,' the sisters write.

          'Have you had the experience of just barely making it inside before you slam the door behind you and burst into tears for ten minutes?

          Then you wipe your nose, sigh a big sigh, and feel relieved from the weight of whatever made you cry? You may not have changed the situation that caused the stress, but you completed the cycle.'

          7. Do something creative

          'Engaging in creative activities today leads to more energy, excitement, and enthusiasm tomorrow.

          'Why? How? Like sports, the arts—including painting, sculpture, music, theatre, and storytelling in all forms—create a context that tolerates, even encourages, big emotions.'

          Time to get those watercolours out, or pick up a new hobby, stat.