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Health & Wellness

How Your Mood Affects Your Health

By Anastasia Stephens, Independent UK. Posted December 14, 2007.


Smiling, laughing and feeling thankful doesn't just make you a better person to be around -- it makes you a healthier one too.
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That Mood Ring Could Save Your Life

Having an Argument

As your irritation mounts, you can feel your blood pressure rising. And that's exactly what is happening to your body when you have an argument. The effects, it seems, can be lasting. In the week after the irritating incident, you just need to think about the argument and your blood pressure will rise again, according to research published in the International Journal of Psychophysiology. So if you've recently experienced a dispute, a seething irritation or a simple frustration, you could be best off forgetting about it.

A half-hour argument with your lover can also slow your body's ability to heal by at least a day. In couples who regularly argue, that healing time is doubled again. Researchers at Ohio State University discovered this by testing married couples with a suction device that created tiny blisters on their arm. When couples were then asked to talk about an area of disagreement that provoked strong emotions, the wounds took around 40 per cent longer to heal. This response, say researchers, was caused by a surge in cytokines -- immune-molecules that trigger inflammation. Chronic high levels of these are linked to arthritis, diabetes, heart-disease and cancer.

Falling in Love

Researchers at the University of Pavia, in Italy, have found that falling in love raises levels of Nerve Growth Factor for about a year. This hormone-like substance helps to restore the nervous system and improves memory by triggering the growth of new brain cells. It is also associated with the feeling of being "loved-up" and contented, inducing a calming effect on the body and mind. Unfortunately, researchers found levels dropped after about a year -- the point at which feelings of romantic love fall away and reality kicks in.

Being Under Pressure

The effects of constant pressure -- a form of chronic stress -- are well-known. Robert Sapolsky, professor of biological sciences at Stanford University and an authority on stress, puts it like this: "In fight-or-flight, your body turns off all the long-term building and repair projects," he says. "Constant high levels of cortisol take your body's eye off the ball. Memory and accuracy are both impaired. Patrols for invaders aren't sent out, you tire more easily, you can become depressed and reproduction gets downgraded." Exposed to chronic stress for years, high blood levels of glucose and fatty acids increase the risk of cardiovascular disease and diabetes. A recent study at University College London found that stress raised cholesterol levels, another factor that increases the risk of cardiovascular disease.

Uncontrollable Laughter

Scientists at the University of California have discovered that laughter relaxes tense muscles, reduces production of stress-causing hormones, lowers blood pressure, and helps increase oxygen absorption in the blood. Cardiologists at the University of Maryland Medical Center found laughing can actually reduce the risk of heart attack by curbing unwanted stress, which can destroy the protective lining of blood vessels. A good giggle also burns calories since it's possible to move 400 muscles of the body when laughing. Some researchers estimate that laughing 100 times offers an aerobic workout equivalent to 10 minutes on a rowing machine or 15 minutes on an exercise bike.

Hiding Your Irritation

It's hard to know what's best -- venting anger or holding it in, as both have negative effects. A long-term study in Michigan looked at reactions to authority figures who yelled at subjects for something they had not done. Women who suppressed their anger in confrontations had twice the risk of dying from conditions such as heart attack, stroke or cancer. Angry outbursts last only a few minutes, but can cause massive surges in adrenaline, blood pressure and heart rate, raising the risk of heart attack or stroke by up to five times in people over 50. Subtle forms of anger, including impatience, irritability and grouchiness, damage health, too -- these states are associated with anxiety, low mood and a higher infection risk due to depressed immunity.

Breaking Down in Tears

When you cry, you really do cry out negative emotion. Dr. William Frey, a US biochemist, compared the tears of women who cried for emotional reasons with those who cried on exposure to onions. Emotional tears were found to contain high levels of hormones and neurotransmitters associated with stress. They also led to lower blood pressure, pulse rate and more synchronised brain-wave patterns. Dr. Frey concluded that the purpose of emotional crying is to remove stress chemicals. He says the continued presence of these substances -- when you hold tears in -- would keep you in a needless state of tension. Your body would then be prone to the negative effects of anxiety, including weakened immunity, impaired memory and poor digestion.


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Anastasia Stephens is a health consultant and journalist in the U.K.

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Irony and conflict of interest
Posted by: kepstein7777 on Dec 18, 2007 4:08 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Every day Alternet publishes articles on: Cheney's evil plans to rule the world, all the ways the government is spying on you and trying to lock you up...how they're butchering the Constitution...how religious nuts want to padlock our bedrooms and rewrite history...all the new wars they're trying to start...the decline of the middle class...the rich are getting richer...the poor are getting poorer...The US economy is collapsing...

Is Alternet trying to scare off their readers with this article? Or is this part of a new strategy to change their content to stories about sunshine, flowers, butterflies, and smiley faces?

How exactly are we supposed to avoid "depression, pessimism and apathy", and remain in the real world?

How many deep breaths can you take in one day before you pass out? How often can you snuggle on the sofa with your lovey before they kick you in the groin and call you a needy, clingy creep?

Holding in your anger is bad for you, but letting it out is bad too? Where exactly should we put it, then?

Knock five items off your to-do list? Would the author be willing to explain that to my boss when her head explodes and she drags me out of my cube by my hair?

Laughter may not be a cure, but I'll admit it helps the symptoms once in a while. If only I could find something humorous in all of this.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Irony and conflict of interest Posted by: Fat Man at the Buffet Line
» RE: Irony and conflict of interest Posted by: IndispensiBill
Stress Releasing Techniques
Posted by: drricklippin on Dec 18, 2007 5:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While I am a huge fan of relaxation techniques and the work of HeartMath is truly revolutionary (heartrate variabilty) I am ALSO a fan of "STRESS RELEASE"

While the article referenced the mirth response (laughing) and weeping I defined #5 stress releasing techniques in the 1980s

- laughing
- weeping
- hitting and kicking (inanimate objects)
- orgasm
- creating (active meditation)

I routinely prescribe them to my patients!

Dr. Rick Lippin
http://medicalcrises.blogspot.com

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» RE: Stress Releasing Techniques-More Posted by: drricklippin
» RE: Stress Releasing Techniques Posted by: drricklippin
» RE: e: Stress Releasing Techniques Posted by: drricklippin
Right-wing governments 'increase suicide rates'
Posted by: Forrest on Dec 18, 2007 5:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
great article! just what the medical doctor needed to prescribe for all of us having to cope with a world "gone wild".

As an anthropologist, it's obvious why many comics come from the minorities; introverts, jews, blacks, women, and now rednecks? and it's equally obvious why humour (truly good humour!) is to be found not coming from "conservatives" but rather from "liberals".

coping mechanisms!

Laughing at these buffoons will not make them go away, but it'll make you feel a whole lot better! (and healthier!)

and we need to watch for our comrades who take these buffoons too seriously!

Check out the New Scientist article from 2002:

Right-wing governments 'increase suicide rates'

* 23:01 18 September 2002
* NewScientist.com news service
* Andy Coghlan

http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn2817

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» Watch George Carlin Posted by: makeadifference
» Dont forget Monty Python.... Posted by: morticia
Here's a perfect idea. TURN OFF YOUR TELEVISION !
Posted by: maxpayne on Dec 18, 2007 6:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That'll put plenty of happiness in you. My wife and I have been off the telly and we're loving it.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Good article.
Posted by: wheresarah on Dec 18, 2007 8:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Perhaps it is too light a topic for some of Alternet's readers, but I think it's important. As one of my replies above suggests, it's all about finding balance. The world out there is mostly depressing for those of us who are addicted to following politics! I have days when I have to look away temporarily just for the sake of my own health and sanity. I can start to feel hopeless at the state of the world, and I know it's not good for me.

I can't do any good for others out there if I'm making myself sick with negativity. It's true, you DO have to seek out the good, seek out the beauty in the world and in life. It's still out there but you have to LOOK FOR IT.

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» RE: Good article. Posted by: talkville
Please, stick your head in the sand, yes... further down!
Posted by: DaBear on Dec 18, 2007 9:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While the articles claims are accepted "common sense" in Brit and 'Merkaan culture, I can't help but notice the obvious conclusion one is supposed to draw from such fluff pieces: don't worry, be happy (and let the bad guys do what they do best... stick your head further into the sand if you're not happy enough... visualize that McMansion and it will come to you....). BULLSHIRT!

Fact is negative emotions are the same as positive emotions: markers, flags for us to pay attention to what's going on and respond accordingly. Anger is a very useful flag, so depression. They let us know something needs to be addressed, NOW.

But here we are in the midst of the worst pile of shit the human species has ever concocted and we have Alternet telling us what the Xtian fundies want us to believe... be positive, laugh, be happy, don't experience negativity, ever. Your health will thank you. BULLSHIRT!

You're all bein' sold up the river while they steal your lunch. Emotions are flags. Yes, laugh, cuddle, have orgasms, smile, but get pissed off, jealous and depressed so you will pay attention and do something about things. To try to ignore your evolutionary-gifted, built-in flags and warnings so you can "live longer" is extinction behavior. Basic Human-ity 101.

Here's a thought, why would you want to live longer in a world run into the ground by the schmucks who piss you off? I'd rather spend my time being fully human, experiencing all emotional ranges and responding to them well. And if that means being pissed off enough to grab the nearest Repuke by the neck and makin' him drink his pee-water, so be it. If it takes a year off my life, fantastic. It was worth every moment. As Lewis Black says, "You'd better, because you're fucked!"

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Not allowed to cry
Posted by: Lauren on Dec 18, 2007 12:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
co-de·pen·dent or co·de·pen·dent (kō'dĭ-pĕn'dənt)

adj. 1) Mutually dependent. 2) Of or relating to a relationship in which one person is psychologically dependent in an unhealthy way on someone who is addicted to a drug or self-destructive behavior, such as chronic gambling.
n. One who is co-dependent or in a co-dependent relationship.

I received a holiday card from Liza and Paul, friends (no, ex-friends, Jeffs friends are no longer mine to claim, I'm deleted from the greeting) from my church.
- P.S. Mardi gras! : )

This makes me cry.

Maybe Paul agrees with Jeff, thinks I'm nuts with this church idea, maybe he even backs Jeff up bringing me down a notch, a common reaction in some men - I didn't think Paul was like that or I never would have given him my Indian hat. A very special gift to my mind, goes with grave responsibilities. I thought he understood. Maybe he was just being a trickster, collecting junk that might be valuable some day. In which case I might want to try to get my hat back, I only paid two dollars for it, but it's spirit value was immense.

I know everybody was talking about this church thing even though Jeff denies knowing anything about it. Paul knows EVERYBODY (I carried his phone number as an emergency contact person) he must have an opinion about my religious freedom project. Does Liza know, she sent the card to my house. She must have assumed I moved out. Jeff wanted that. No, I am in the nice big house, because I know how to win.

I am looking forward to working on healing myself. I gave up far too much of myself building this Hippie church, way too much. My children's father makes it quite clear to everyone, but especially to them, that my native American religious perspective is not allowed. It's treated with derision, sarcasm and disrespect in his house.

I am looking forward to building a new life, maybe someone else believes in me, will take me to the Mardi gras show. Maybe there is someone who actually respects what I do, not be enraged by it. That would be nice. I have been terrorized. I'm afraid of a lot of things now, but I still like to dance the holidays with my friends. Maybe I don't have friends there, I thought I did.

One thing I am doing to heal myself is destroying, mutilating and burning Jeff's underground comics. I think it used to be a valuable $$ collection, not anymore. I hurt myself doing it, my left hand tearing up a book. It is very good emotional therapy to be able to destroy his collection of vicious misogamist graphic crap. I'm not doing it all at once. I am making multiple healing ceremonies, thus extending and multiplying the powerful healing force of this ceremony, by doing it in stages

I sorely miss my kids.

I dreamed about the trail of tears last night, the heart of my family was broken by that same rejection, they never stopped, they just do it in different ways now.

The winds of life blow in four directions.
The sacred waters flow to the sea.
The eagle flies high as any mountain.
Oh, Great Spirit, keep us free.

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One must wonder
Posted by: talkville on Dec 20, 2007 3:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
C Wright Mills wrote way back in those "other times" about the Conservative Mood.

The points made by this writer are undeniably correct with regard to humor and laughter in relation to one's health. One must wonder these days, however, if such a position favors a kind of willful idiocy and escapist attitude or a kind of outright lunacy needed to maintain such an attitude towards living.

The assault on every aspect of human existence by the Right in this country is ubiquitous; sadly this is no laughing matter. The 'happiness' these people and organizations want is THEIR OWN. By all means, laugh and take a break in solidarity with friends, but these are times of struggle for vast majorities; best not to obscure this either.

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Living is a personal business
Posted by: mont on Dec 22, 2007 4:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and all those nay sayers who wring their hands and say that there is no room for laughing because the world is a nasty place, I can only laugh at them! So thanks!

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The stress releasing power of activism
Posted by: Camilla Cracchiolo on Dec 23, 2007 11:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I find it sad that alternet published an article that did not even mention the well-documented role of activism and taking back control over your life as important stress reduction/healing health interventions.

One of the largest and most damaging sources of stress in human beings AND animals is powerlessness in the face of oppression. Learned helplessness will actually cause animals to die.

There's a guy named Bruce Levine, a Ph.D psychologist, who promotes activism and community to combat depression.

Check out his work at http://www.brucelevine.net. I personally find it very inspiring. (and no, I have no affiliation with him.)

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