Scribble hero wrote:
Hey Jimmy,
Thanks for your reply. I really hope it is just stress. I was wondering if you have any tips or recommendations as to how I could “vent” the stress in other ways? Thank you.
Scribble hero
Generally when you think of your brain, you visualize the human brain as a whole but in reality it is composed of several brains that are wired together. They are like layers of an onion. Stress targets each of these layers differently and also causes different negative traits or disorders. The inner core is similar to an infant’s brain The middle Limbic Region of the brain controls the arms and legs. When it undergoes a major threat, it produces a fight or flight response. The outer layer is the social brain.
When an individual is threatened, the overload of stress will cause the brain to collapse inward. If the social brain cannot eliminate the stress, then the body turns it over to the middle layer. But if an individual is unable to defend itself or escape, then it collapses into the core brain. This is what takes place in a melt down or panic attack. In a bad panic attack the individual loses their ability to even talk. They are unable to move.
Stress is multilayered. It is also cumulative. If the body endures too much stress it can transform into distress.
So how do you vent stress. So let me describe the middle layer. When you are threatened, you might try to flee the threat or attack the threat. If you are unable to do either then you are trapped. You body releases a variety of chemical into your body for a fight/flight response. But if you are trapped that means these chemicals are not used up but rather stored in your nervous system and muscles. They need to be vented otherwise they will over time damage your body.
So let me begin by saying that instead of four limbs (2 arms & 2 legs), you really have five. The fifth is your neck. Exercise can vent some stress. But there is a secret here. Generally the stress relieved from exercise only last for a short time - minutes. But only a certain type of exercise called maximal or supramaximal exercise can purge the stress deeply and completely for long periods of time (hours, days and weeks). This stress release emulates the actual stress of the encounter. If your inhibited reaction to a threat was to run away and you didn’t, then you need to run as fast as the wind with a tiger chasing you at your heals.
So to vent the stress from your legs long-term then do ten 6-second maximal sprints (around a 50-meter dash, running like a bat out of hell) with a 30 second recovery between each sprint.
To vent the stress from your arms, then attack a punching bag or boxing speed bag for 6 seconds moving your arms so fast they become a blur. Then rest for 30 seconds and repeat this ten times. You do not need to exert great force when you contact the bag, speed is what matters.
To vent stress from the neck, you need to scream at the top of your lungs several times. But you must do this in a socially acceptable manner. Do not scream at a person. I live in the country and my dog is a free-range dog. When it is mealtime, I call my dog, very loudly. My voice carries about a mile and echoes back to me from nearby hills. It gives me a sense of great strength, like I could split a mountain in two just with my voice alone. You might try howling like a wolf at the moon. There is a person on this site that howls at the subway cars as they pass by deep down in the subway stations in New York City. But there are other ways to scream in a socially acceptable manner. A singer can do this if it is a very powerful song. A barker in the county fair can do this. Or find yourself a soundproof room.