Stress relief & the Scio
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| Stress
Reduction and Relief can be one of the most beneficial health steps you can take. Peace, relaxation and biofeedback can help. |
Stress
is defined as a nonspecific response of the body to
any demand made upon it which results in symptoms
such as rise in the blood pressure, release of
hormones, quickness of breath, tightening of
muscles, perspiration, and increased cardiac
activity.
Stress is not necessarily negative. Some stress
keeps us motivated and alert, while too little
stress can create problems. However, too much stress
can trigger problems with mental and physical
health, particularly over a prolonged period of
time.
Any experience that taxes an individual's energy or well-being; stress may be physical, mental, or emotional.
Tension (Psychology): a state of mental or emotional strain or suspense; "he suffered from fatigue and emotional tension"; "stress is a vasoconstrictor".
Physics: Force that produces strain on a physical body; "the intensity of stress is expressed in units of force divided by units of area". Mental or physical tension that results from physical, emotional, or chemical causes.
What may be considered "stress relief"?
Anything
that relieves mundane stress on a daily basis, such
as relaxation, can help.
Hans Selye, a Hungarian medical scientist, was the
first to use the word "stress" in
connection with a picture of health wellness. His
theory is that when the body reacts to stress, it
creates an "alarm" response.
That
means that your body is in good shape to react
accordingly to any given stressor, hopefully
appropriately and effectively in ways that relieve
it.
If the stress continues, however, an
"adaptation" state may result, where we
learn to accommodate or bear the symptoms of stress
by adjusting to them.
This can, more positively, mean creating an increase
in our tolerance to frustration and moving back into
the alarm state, which relieves the stress, or,
negatively, reacting with an accommodating
adjustment that (temporarily) alleviates the pain of
the stress but becomes a new holding pattern.
If the
stress continues even longer, an
"exhaustion" state is created that may
lead to a considerably weakened system. This alarm /
adaptation / exhaustion model fits all forms of
stress, whether physical, mental, or emotional.
Obviously, reducing stress is a key to well-being.
Relaxation helps, but how do we know where stress
may be hiding in the adapted or exhausted states
physically, mentally, and emotionally.
With the help of the SCIO Quantum Biofeedback system, we can painlessly and non-invasively look at reactions to common stressors and begin to piece the picture together.
Most people find the biofeedback experience relaxing, soothing and beneficial. The side effects of biofeedback may include these possibilities (and many more that may be experienced):
-
Ability to relax more quickly
-
Deeper state of relaxation during sleep
-
Easier to fall asleep and stay asleep
-
Reduction of stress and hypertension
-
Improved general health
-
Increase in amount of calmness and peacefulness
-
Reduction of anger
-
Less fearfulness
-
Fewer anxiety attacks
-
Amelioration of sorrow
-
Reduction of the depth of depression
-
Heightened muscle mobility
-
Enhanced mental clarity
-
Able to pay attention more consistently
-
Better focus of attention
-
Deeper concentration and enhanced memory
-
Less attention to pain and stressors
-
Less concentration on pain and stressors
-
Fewer feelings of pain and stress
-
Less intense focus on pain and stressors
-
Less intensity of any pain or any stress
-
More able to manage stress and pain
Specialists who provide a variety of forms of Biofeedback range from Psychologists, Medical Doctors, Dentists, Chiropractors, Internists, Nurses, Physical Therapists, Naturopaths, Veterinarians to Energy Medicine Practitioners, and many others.
STRESS REDUCTION, STRESS RELIEF AND THE SCIO
SCIO stands for “Scientific Consciousness
Interface Operating System,” which is a reference
to how fast it’s able to comfortably and
non-invasively obtain feedback on reactions above
what we call a “baseline”, or “norm” of
response to thousands of electronic signatures of
various items, in a very short amount of time.
Any reactions above a baseline of the “norm” are
considered to be significant as possible responses
from stress. Reducing the stress response in an
individuated way, unique to each individual, is what
the SCIO is all about.
Let’s define “stress”, and how it can impact
us in ways you may not have considered before.
Stress runs much deeper than most people are aware
of, in ways that can impact our mental and physical
wellbeing, especially if it occurs, even gradually,
over a prolonged period of time.
In a nutshell, stress is any perceived mental or
physical tension that results from environmental,
physical, mental, emotional, chemical and a host of
other causes.
Stress is a response of the body and mind to any
demand made upon it which results in symptoms, such
as a rise in blood pressure, release of hormones,
quickness of breath, tightening of muscles,
increased mental and cardiac activity and much more.
The most obvious stress response is referred to as
the “fight-or-flight” reaction, which is your
body’s fast and automatic switch into “high
alert.”
This reaction helps you deal with any perceived
threat from your environment, even more subtle forms
such as “information overload” or your life’s
circumstances.
But never before in the history of humankind have we
created a world that exposes us to so much rapidly
delivered information, be it from media sources,
traffic and communication systems, or nonverbally
from the environment.
An overload of messages can also come from internal
sources: either biological, mental, emotional or all
three at the same time.
Our minds are theorized to only manage 7 or 8
bits of information well at once, so anything beyond
this can automatically activate this “fight or
flight” biological response, even if on a subtle
level that doesn’t seem like what we would call a
real life threatening emergency.
In the larger scheme of things, this response was
designed to stimulate your body to produce the
energy, concentration and agility either to protect
yourself or to run as fast as possible.
But in our modern times, sometimes stress, even in
the form of excess worry or anger, can seem to never
let up.
Some of our more “modern” stressful
circumstances, unlike most immediate physical
threats, do tend to be prolonged and faced on a
continual basis.
So, we can see how this runs the possibility of
producing this reaction for much longer than it’s
intended, or needed, to be “on” for.
This can go on continually so that you may not be
aware of it anymore, as the immune system, digestive
system and brain can become further and further
stressed from over activation.
We may “adapt” to and simply tolerate our
stressors, as opposed to managing or reducing them.
But what’s good for your body in a short-term
crisis can be harmful over long periods.
The long-term activation of the stress-response
system can disrupt almost all your body’s
processes, impacting risks such as weight gain,
insomnia, serious digestive and cardiac issues,
memory, physical illnesses and conditions, and a
much more. It can even impair our absorption
of nutrients.
It engages the heart in way that changes
neurotransmitter and mineral levels, often
imbalancing or depleting them when they’re needed
for other normal bodily functions, such as
maintaining bone density.
In the initial phase, the brain sets off an entire
response “system” throughout your body through
nerve and hormonal signals, which activates your
adrenal glands to release powerful hormones, such as
adrenaline and cortisol.
Cortisol also slows functions that would be
temporarily unnecessary in an extreme emergency
situation, but in daily life, all-important for
maintaining wellness.
It can change your immune system responses by
impairing disease-fighting white blood cells; and
suppress the digestive, reproductive and growth
systems, which are all a part of maintaining overall
health.
But, if the stress response never fully switches
completely “off”, stress hormones can continue
to wash through the system in high levels, failing
to leave the blood and tissues in a timely way.
Any perceived stress ~ such as from work, personal
relationships, major life changes, illness, or the
death of a family member, friend or pet, or for
some, even responses to foods such as sugar ~
can set off the same stress response system in the
body.
The longer you “adapt” to them without
intervention, the more, in theory, you are at risk
of entering the “exhaustion” stage of stress,
where your body’s own maintenance systems can be
overwhelmed and not functioning at optimal levels
that protect you.
But every person is unique. Your reaction to a
potentially stressful event, even in normal daily
life, is different from anyone else’s. Some
people naturally manage stress well, while others
react strongly to the smallest stressor.
Life experiences can also affect your response to
stress: People who were exposed to stressful events
as children in the form of neglect or abuse tend to
be more vulnerable to stress as adults.
In light of our modern world of excess chemical
toxicity, some of which mimic hormones, along with
emotional tension and the “information highway”
overload of messages, stress is a part of life.
However, you can learn to identify your stressors,
how to take control of some stress-inducing
circumstances and lifestyles, even in your
environment, and learn how to take care of yourself
physically and emotionally.
The payoff of managing and reducing stress can be
enormous, even by assisting your body to do what it
was designed to do, which is repair itself and
maintain your health. Your body is designed to
heal itself.
Take the case of a broken bone: a doctor may
set it in a cast, but your bone heals itself.
So, as you can see by now, there are a lot of
issues, even some serious diseases and conditions,
linked to components of stress. Even the AMA
has admitted that stress is a contributing factor in
many diseases, including some infectious diseases.
The SCIO gives us feedback on your unique responses
to stress in a highly refined way, and helps train
you to react differently, and to reduce and control
it.
Biofeedback allows individuals to take control over
bodily processes normally considered involuntary.
SCIO Quantum Biofeedback empowers people with the
ability to use specific reactive signals from their
own bodies to positively change the way they live!


