About
ten years ago I had a heart attack brought on by stress. These are the steps I
used to help myself heal:
1. I made a list of the things causing me stress.
2.
Every time I got upset or angry over a specific situation, I wrote it down and
included it in my list.
3. I
examined each item on my list and categorized it as:
a) something that can be resolved via an action by me;
b) something over which I had no control;
c) something that time will resolve.
4. The
items that were the things that could be resolved by taking action were
categorized by the least stressing to the most stressing.
5. I worked on resolving one issue at a time. I
started with the one that required the littlest effort and went from there.
This list is never-ending. There will always be something that gets added on
with resolutions that require time, money or emotional expense.
6. The
stresses over which I have no control, I pushed aside thinking I would come
back to them after I had dealt with all the more pressing stuff.
7. Resolutions which simply involved letting
some time pass, were also pushed aside. Actually, I wrote them on a calendar as
a reminder. When the calendar reminded me of the item, I would check to see if
the issue had been resolved. If not, it went back on the calendar.
One of
the biggest things I learned in my heart health recovery, is to take time for
laughter. Find humor every chance you can. Laugh. No, I mean, LAUGH your butt
off! Laugh at the backed-up traffic because it allows you some time to listen
to great tunes while you’re waiting. Laugh at the price of a new car because
you don’t really have to spend that much money. Laugh at political speeches
because of the ridiculousness of statements being made Laugh at everything and
anything. Every time you laugh, you physically release stress.
My
basic personality is to fix things. People call on me to help them with their
problems all the time, but really all I can do is listen, suggest and
encourage. What I really want to do is take the responsibility from them and do
what they should do themselves.
For
example, a friend has a bestie with serious health problems. The bestie had
some medical tests done and has received the results. The friend calls to check
on her and wants to know the test results in order to provide the support the
bestie needs. But, the bestie is dodging her calls and ignoring her texts. The
friend is very concerned and desperately wants to help the bestie. She asks me
what she should do. My response… get in your car, drive to her house and don’t
stop knocking until she answers the door. You’ll have your answer when you see
her face. That’s when you will know what to do.
What I
really want to do is go to the bestie house myself and ask her what’s up. Tell
her to get over herself and let others help. However… her illness is not my circus
and her test results are not my monkeys. I cannot interfere with this
relationship. They must figure it out on their own.
Figuring
it out is the hardest part. Most of the time there are many optional answers to
a situation. It’s difficult to discover which is the right one.
If
you’re dealing with excess stress in your life, take control and resolve
everything that you can. Stress will kill you as much as a speeding bullet.
Cover your heart with a Superman cape and ricochet those bullets to oblivion.
You’ll be happy you did.
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