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Exercise And Stress Control


As we look at the factors that play into the relationship between exercise and stress control, the most important ones to me are:
  • Enhanced awareness as to why it’s important
  • Motivation to exercise
  • Making the time commitment
  • Commit to exercise as a lifestyle
Most people understand why exercise is important, and experience how it is helpful in reducing stress , but…

Why isn’t this knowledge enough?

When you can understand how stress works and how it affects you…

Then, you are better able to adapt to stress…

And, you will be better able to live with less stress.



Why exercise is important to controlling stress?

Here are some of the reasons why physical exercise is important for maintaining physical health, balance, and an overall sense of well-being. And exercise has a positive effect on:
  • establishing and maintaining a healthy weight
  • building and maintaining healthy bone density
  • muscle strength and joint mobility
  • promoting physiological well-being
  • strengthening the immune system
  • increasing brain functioning
And, since exercise plays a very important role in reducing the main stress hormone, cortisol.

Increased levels of cortisol are not your friend. With chronic stress , cortisol can cause many health problems, both physically and emotionally.

Motivation to exercise

Getting motivated to exercise can often feel as if you as standing at the base of a mountain and looking straight up. The hardest part is often just getting started.

Aside from the potential physical benefits of exercising listed above, it will also help you to:
  • Relax
  • Feel better about yourself
  • Motivate you to eat better and eat less
  • Clears your head of the stressful thoughts in your head

exercise and stress control

Making the time

Making the time for exercise and stress control can feel like the biggest challenge to many.

I have found that “exercise” needs change a bit as we age. Whereas when I was a young jockette and was highly motivated to be a workout maniac, that all changed as I got older.

The most important gift we can give ourselves throughout life, and particularly as we age and have to balance so many more responsibilities is to realize that it is “movement” that is important.

Think about creating more opportunities throughout your day to increase your level of movement activities:
  • Park at the end of a parking lot so you can walk further
  • Take the stairs instead of the elevator
  • Dance around your house as you clean
  • Go for a 10-20 minute walk each day



Make the commitment to YOU

Life is always going to give us ample things to always have to “do”. None is more important than to honor your body as a temple that is working hard each day to:
  • Protect you
  • Nourish you
  • Sustain you
Make a choice to commit to YOU through increasing your movement activities. Sometimes a hardship is only a hardship as long as we think about it in those ways.

Think about exercise and stress control as just a normal part of taking care of yourself each day…like eating.

Your body, emotions, thoughts, actions and behaviors will all thank you!







For more information, please see:

Return From Exercise And Stress Control To Ways To Reduce Stress

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Pay it forward!

There a lot of people who have become overwhelmed by stress and how to get rid of it. I can understand this feeling. But it does not mean that good information is NOT out there. It is.

Please help a friend or loved one by sharing this information with them. Email this link to them or submit this page to your Tweet account, or Facebook or your favorite social bookmarking or networking site. Use the links below to pay it forward.




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Stress Tip Of The Day!

Throughout each day, the primary cause of stress is because of threats of uncertainty.

It is thoughts of fear and worry that are triggering the stress response.

Staying focused on maintaining a positive attitude is an important stress technique.



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“Ms. Churchill is the unique health care worker everyone hopes to encounter, but rarely does. She has an extraordinary gift that allows her to do much more than diagnose and treat.”
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K., age 45, is a long term chronically PTSD disabled patient. She has had daily headaches for 20 years. Two weeks ago she reported that she had had 4 days of pain free time, and was having the exceedingly odd sensation of "smiling all the time". She and Cathi have made extraordinary fast progress together.
Dr. Cole




I referred C.L., age mid-forties, to see Cathi after a life of suffering the post traumatic stress disorder of parental sexual abuse over many years of her childhood, with major dysfunctions of alcohol and drug abuse, and with the disabling symptoms of migraine that have for more than twenty years become chronic.

She has lived with daily headaches that have not responded to any of the several drugs which have benefited many such suffering patients. She has needed chronic opiate treatment of her chronic pain syndrome.

In the few weeks that Cathi has worked with her, C.L. has begun to experience days without pain, periods of happiness, and a reduction in her opiate dosage requirements that represent a breakthrough in her stalled-out life as a single mom raising a teen-age daughter with only social security income resources.
Dr. Racer








“I first met Cathi Churchill eight years ago when she effectively helped my work unit through the stress of a hospital-wide layoff. I was impressed with her clear-minded approach and willingness to listen.”
Andy R.




N., age 60, is a hard driving attorney twenty year patient of mine who hit the wall with chronic fatigue four years ago, and began to realize she had to learn to rest. She recovered enough to return to her workaholic lifestyle when she was stopped by a herniated cervical disc and resumption of her chronic colitis.

Working with Cathi, she is discovering "the way she does life" and learning to make choices about it. She came in last week, having "danced until dawn". She is learning to dialogue with her body in effective ways.
Dr. Cole




“I stumbled upon Cathi after my recent heart attack that was brought on by stress. I was scared of having another one, and didn’t know what to do. I had lost hope. Working with her has changed my life. I’m so grateful."
Debbie – Canada




M.S., a woman in her late forties with progressively more and more disabling rheumatoid arthritis since childhood, whose most recent problems have arisen over the last two to three years as complications of immunosuppressive therapy for her disease. The complications have been associated with the severely disabling chronic pain of recurrent herpes neuralgia for more than three years, and for the past 15 months, recurrent osteomyelitis in her right lower mandible.

The second, more alarming (even life-threatening) problem has caused months of diagnostic and therapy confusion among her many consultants, three successive resections of the bone over the last six to eight months, and the still ongoing threat of more relapses of the smoldering bone infection and chronic pain only made bearable by chronic, massive doses of opiates.

In the few months since M. began to work with Cathi with several modalities: stress management, therapeutic touch, guided imaging, and others, her life has become more livable, as she has become able to bear the pain and the discouragement of unresolved disease.

She has relied on many of the methods for maintaining hope and getting through overwhelming discouragement by using the inner resources she has learned with Cathi.

My hope as her primary physician, is that Cathi and M. will be able to continue to work together to maintain that inner strength and hope as she faces yet more months of pain, and further repeated surgery.

Thank you for the healing guidance you've been able to give her thus far.
Dr. Racer




“I sought out the help of Cathi during my divorce, and found her to be an insightful and compassionate coach. Her ability to see deep into the heart of an emotionally stressful problem is, I believe, unique and I would highly recommend her service to anyone.”
P.R. – Brooklyn Center




S., age 48, is a Laotian patient of mine with 15 years of chronic abdominal pain. She has had an extensive medical worked up, and nothing ever worked. Cathi saw her over several months.

S. has improved! Cathi established a trusting relationship with her, and helped her to effectively break through her wall of silence and grief about her son's mental illness, and taught her how to "change her thinking".

S. now comes in smiling, notes some unusual continued symptoms, but no longer has chronic abdominal disabling pain.
Dr. Cole




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Tony.


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