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Stress and
the Mind-Body Connection
The stress
response is perhaps the best understood example of the
mind-body connection.
What Happens
in Your Mind
For the stress
response to be initiated, your mind must perceive something as
a threat. That doesn’t mean that you consciously know there is
a threat; in fact, it usually happens subconsciously. Maybe
your boss walks into your office without notice, or you are
subconsciously aware of a scary man hanging around you at the
mall, or maybe things are just hectic and you can’t get it all
done on time.
Whatever the
reason, your mind interprets what is happening as a threat. It
sends a message that alerts your
hypothalamus.
The
Mind-Body Connector: The Hypothalamus
Some people
call the hypothalamus the mind-body connector. It is the
interface between your thoughts and your body’s automatic
responses to those thoughts. The hypothalamus secretes
corticotropic releasing factor (CRF) and initiates the body’s
response to stress.
What Happens
in Your Body
The
hypothalamus starts the ball rolling, and the pituitary gland
in your brain responds to CRF by releasing adrenocorticotropic
hormone (ACTH). ACTH stimulates the adrenal glands and they
secrete stress hormones. In response to stress, the adrenal
gland secretes two major hormones (along with some that are
less actively involved in stress): adrenaline and
cortisol.
Adrenalin
stimulates your heart, lungs, brain, and blood vessels—all the
most important organs for survival. It sends more blood to
those organs and pulls blood away from your skin and digestive
system. You body’s idea is that if you’re facing death, you
don’t need to digest stuff or feel pain, and your body thinks
every threat is a death threat.
Your adrenals
don’t mount a proportional response, either. It’s an
all-or-nothing fight to the death. Your adrenals flood your
body with adrenaline, so your heart rate and blood pressure go
up, you’re hyper alert—ready to fight off the threat or run
from it. Your adrenal glands also secrete cortisol, which helps
your body use its energy stores to meet the
emergency.
Using Your
Mind-Body Connection
Stress is
supposed to help you in an emergency, but it’s not supposed to
be your normal state. In our culture, however, we are stressed
most of the time, and when stress is unrelenting, it wears our
bodies out.
You can use the
mind-body connection to turn off your stress response -- at
least some of the time. That’s what some relaxation techniques,
like meditation and visualization, do. They convince your mind
that there is no threat, and your mind tells the hypothalamus
to stop sending out CRF so the response stops. When you know
how the mind body connection works, you can use it to decrease
and manage your stress.
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