
Do This Every Morning To End Stress, Stop Laziness & Heal The Body | Dr. Rangan Chatterjee
Rangan Chatterjee
23 feb 2024
Mindsip insights from this episode:
Manage microstressors to prevent reaching your stress threshold
Small, seemingly harmless stressors like hitting snooze or checking emails first thing in the morning accumulate, pushing you closer to your personal stress threshold where things go wrong.
Prioritize sleep, flow, and recovery to prevent burnout
Research from the Flow Research Collective shows it's almost impossible to burn out if you get 7-8 hours of sleep, access a state of flow one to two times a week, and engage in regular active recovery.
Prioritize daily social interactions to boost well-being
Psychologists have identified "Vitamin S" (Social) as a critical social nutrient, suggesting that brief, positive interactions with strangers can fulfill basic needs for connection and appreciation.
Reframe negative interactions as opportunities for self-discovery
Instead of letting negative social interactions ruin your day, you can reframe them as opportunities to learn about yourself by creating a "hero story" for the other person, which empowers you and reduces emotional stress.
Eliminate unnecessary choices to reduce stress
Making thousands of choices a day, even on trivial things, acts as a microstress dose, so eliminating unnecessary choice saves cognitive capacity and reduces your stress load.
Reassess night owl identity; adjust habits for better sleep
Many people who believe they are "night owls" are simply living in a way that pushes back melatonin release, such as looking at bright screens late at night, and are not purely genetically predisposed.
Practice longer out-breaths to control stress response
Any breathing technique where your out-breath is longer than your in-breath, like the 3-4-5 breath, helps switch off your body's stress response system.
Address stress to improve gut health
While food plays a role, stress is the number one player in gut problems, which affect up to 80% of UK adults, because the stress response impacts every organ system.
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