Embrace the Fun - How Hugs and Laughter Help Reduce Stress
In one of my previous posts about reducing stress, I briefly mentioned the benefits of hugging and laughter to help reduce stress. They are such fun, easy, and powerful techniques that anyone can do just about anywhere, I thought it was time to dive a little deeper and look at why they work and how we can actively start using them to reduce the negative effects of chronic stress.
Let’s start by
talking about hugs. Have you ever noticed how a good hug will make you feel
better? It calms you and changes your entire outlook on the world and whatever
it is that’s been upsetting or stressing you out. Turns out there’s some
science behind hugs and a reason we start to feel better.
There are
measurable effects on your heart and on the stress-level of your brain activity
when you hug and those benefits will ramp up significantly around the twenty
second mark. As an added bonus, your body will release oxytocin, a feel-good
hormone. It’s no wonder your whole outlook starts to change after a good
hug.
Start to hug your
loved ones or your favorite pet more often and when you do, try to hold the hug
for at least twenty seconds. Don’t be creepy about it, but if you’re
comfortable - and you should be if you’re sharing a long hug - tell the other
person about the benefits of these longer hugs. Before long it will become
second nature and you’ll both continue to reap the rewards.
When hugging isn’t
an option, or if you don’t enjoy them, give laughing a try. It relieves tension
and reduces stress. As an added benefit, you’re drawing more air into your
lungs, resulting in more oxygen being delivered to your heart, brain, and other
important organs. Laughing often can even improve your immune system.
Put on a funny
movie, watch a TV sitcom, read some funny cartoons, call a friend who makes you
laugh, or just start laughing and fake it until you start to feel it.
Laughter, it turns out, really is great medicine and great for both body and
mind.
Fun fact for you.
There’s even an entire sub niche of yoga practitioners who do laughter yoga as
a stress busting technique. Can you see yourself taking a class where you go
through various yoga exercises while also making a conscious effort to laugh
out loud?
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