Although most women mistakenly believe that cancer is the biggest threat to their lives, heart disease is actually the leading cause of death among women in the US.
While lack of exercise, obesity, high cholesterol and smoking are all predictable causes of heart disease, stress and anxiety are also culprits. Recent research suggests that the complicated physiological reactions to stress, including rises in blood pressure, affect your heart health. While there are many stress creating elements, like job strain, social isolation, personality traits, even anxiety producing phobias, more and more evidence suggests a relationship between the risk of cardiovascular disease and elevated stress. Although more research needs to be done on the complicated relationship between the stress, anxiety, emotions and heart health, many cardiac health experts recommend stress reduction as a preventive measure.
If you are a stress case, there are both short term and long term health benefits to figuring out how to lower your stress level. Don't reach for a smoke or fatty comfort food (both are not good for your heart health) when times are stressful or emotionally rough. Talk to a friend, exercise, get enough sleep, or get a relaxing massage, to help relieve your stress. Taking a couple of deep breaths is a simple and cheap remedy; after all air is free.
What is your healthy stress relief? Tell me in the comments section below.

Yoox
Liberty
Giuseppe Zanotti
Wow I knew it had to have long term effects.
Personally sometimes the only thing that helps my anxiety is taking a Xanax. Unfortunately at times nothing other than medication really works...
Although in some cases I try to distract myself from what's bothering me, maybe take a walk, pop in a movie, go to the gym, try and get fresh air, take a nap, talk to a friend and/or clean. (it gets my mind off things)
1My anti-stress is music and dancing. Even though I lost my iPod I find that when I get stressed I start to sing some song to myself that was on it.
Anxiety/worry - cannot figure that out. Even my therapist has said that I have an extraordinary amount of worry and that I was probably born worrying. Worry motivates me to act so she felt eliminating the worry was not good, reigning it in was a better idea. But is hard too.
My anxiety is actually being induced by medication and until we (my doctor and I) can safely get me off that medication the anxiety/mild paranoia will remain. And the worst of it is the medication is an anti-convulsant that is suppose to control the frequency of my migraines and its just happens that it cause major anxiety in people who were prescribed it. Lower dosage less anxiety, however more intense migraines and more worry.
2"Personally sometimes the only thing that helps my anxiety is taking a Xanax. "
lol! i really don't think that taking medications is any better for your body than the actual worrying!
A lot of this is also habits we do to de-stress, like eat junk food and go shopping, etc.
3Wow! I worry all of the time about everything and anything. I guess that is why I do get massive headaches!
4Easier said than done, right?! Sometimes it's near impossible to NOT worry/stress when things are happening in our lives.
I get bad tension headaches like DreaAST when I stress too much...no good.
5I get so stressed out. But, ever since I found yoga I'm feeling a lot better. I recommend it to anyone feeling a little out of control now and then. I can honestly say, it has changed the way I feel inside and out.
6Dancing in my apt. - music blasting!, Yoga, any exercise, deep breathing, my iPod, calling a friend, fresh air, oh, and pretending to laugh or forcing a smile -- works wonders!
7oh this sucks- i have horrible anxiety! usually it leads me to not eating though.
8When I'm stressed, I play fetch with my dog. I know, weird right? Somehow, it calms me down a lot. I also like to just sit down with a magazine and read it while I sip some wine or have a light beer. It really does calm me down, I guess.
9Post New Comment
Please share your opinion with our community, but make sure it is on topic and follows our Community Rules. We moderate comments and prohibit personal attacks, threats, spam, lewd images, or the promotion of your personal website.