Both
for counselors and clients involved in mental support, increased levels of
physical, emotional, mental, or spiritual stress can make challenges worse. It
is fairly common knowledge that anxiety, panic, fear, anger/rage, loss of
focus, PTSD, chemical dependency and other forms of addiction, and compulsive
behaviors are either created, or made worse, as a response to stress. I
believe that depression or depressive episodes are often the back side of
anxiety (and over stimulation.) With the physiologic response to
stressors/anxieties at least partially shutting down the higher function of
the decision making neo-cortex, stress can lead to poor problem solving,
reduced abilities to communicate, and increased psycho-pathologies.
If you can see the role stress
plays in relationship to increased mental health challenges, then the
contrary, the practice of stress management, can lead to reduced
demonstrations of symptoms. Forms of stress management, biofeedback,
"desensitization," "mindfulness," and other anxiety reducing practices (like
yoga, meditation, diet, exercise, etc) can prove very therapeutic in helping
to control the causes of anxiety/stress related symptoms. Beyond symptom
control, for the motivated client, I feel that using these techniques until
mastered and then regularly, and preventively, can benefit a person by
"empowering" them with body awareness, present living mindfulness, and new
skills to control stressed out physiologies.
Empowerment of the individual
is the key! Self-awareness and then self-control (of habitually held stress)
enables a person to feel better in control of available time and energy and
better able to self-minimize, if not eliminate, psychological symptoms and
emotional/spiritual pain & conflict. Spending time in a "positive" way, in the
present moment, leads to reduced fear and anxiety. This new self-control can
often lead to reduced needs for psycho-active medications, alcohol, or street
drugs.
Stress management, biofeedback,
other behavioral techniques, and other stress reducing practices are not
difficult to learn, but finding the time and motivation to use these effective
techniques often requires support and counsel.
For therapists, counselors,
teachers, and concerned family members, these same techniques are essential in
minimizing the potential for "burn-out," "over-load," and reduction in the
ability to care for your client, student, or family member. To be a positive
role model by regularly practicing stress management, seems an obvious
self-care strategy that serves all parties in therapeutic relationships.
I may be "preaching to the
choir" but even the obvious needs to be restated. Basic stress management is a
necessary element to psycho-therapy. The extra element of simple biofeedback
practices is a beneficial feature offering personal awareness that leads to
better levels of self-control.
Since 1978, the Stress
Education Center has offered coaching, training and products for stress
management.
L. John Mason, Ph.D. is the
country's leading stress management expert and the author of the best selling
"Guide to Stress Reduction." Since 1977, he has offered Success & Executive
Coaching and Training.
Please visit the Stress
Education Center's website at
Stress, Stress Management,
Coaching, and Training for articles, free ezine
signup, and learn about the new telecourses that are available. If you would
like information or a targeted proposal for training or coaching, please
contact us at (360) 593-3833.
If you are looking to
promote your training or coaching career, please investigate the Professional
Stress Management Training
and Certification Program for a secondary source of
income or as career path.