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Does exercise help anxiety? Exploring how working out calms you down

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Does exercise help anxiety? Exploring how working out calms you down

Anxiety may be an overpowering emotion that individuals struggle to deal with. Certain activities help lessen worry when it crops up.

Not just a feeling, persistent unease can disrupt daily life, including work, relationships, and overall contentment. Worry shows up in many forms, from a slight uneasiness to intense panic.

Any activity that makes your heart go faster, produces sweat, or leads to deep breathing is health-boosting. You’re getting stronger, your body is releasing good hormones, and you have a strong support system around you.

For some people, an appropriate and varied training schedule that includes both relaxing and exciting activities may be a more effective technique for reducing anxiety symptoms and increasing stress resilience.


Does exercise help with anxiety?

When you are depressed or anxious, exercise may feel like nothing that you’d like to do. However, once people get started and stick with it, exercise can have a significant impact.

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It’s easy to get wrapped up in the stresses of regular life and lose sight of one of your most essential responsibilities: taking good care of yourself. We face numerous pressures in our daily lives.

Toxic work cultures educate us to work as if there is no tomorrow, regardless of whether our bodies tell us to stop.

Exercise is also thought to be important for maintaining mental health and can help relieve stress.

According to studies, it is extremely good at reducing fatigue, increasing alertness and attention, and improving overall cognitive performance. This is especially useful when stress has drained your energy or capacity to concentrate.


How does exercise help with anxiety?

The more you exercise, the stronger your executive functions become. Exercise promotes neuroplasticity, both in the short and long term.

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Neuroplasticity permits the brain to adjust to changes in outside factors, which might help you cope easier with stressful experiences.

Regular aerobic activity has also been proven to enhance grey matter volume in the prefrontal cortex as well as the hippocampus, resulting in a better attention span along with impulse control.

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Researchers think this is due to runners’ aerobic capacity to maintain a consistent pace for extended periods of time.

Regular running might help you build your fitness level and protect against depression. According to some studies, low cardiorespiratory endurance may lead to the beginning of depression.

Importance of running (image sourced via Pexels / Photo by pixabay)Importance of running (image sourced via Pexels / Photo by pixabay)Hiking benefits for mental health (image sourced via Pexels / Photo by eric sanman)Hiking benefits for mental health (image sourced via Pexels / Photo by eric sanman)Advertisement
Importance of yoga (image sourced via Pexels / Photo by koolshooters)Importance of yoga (image sourced via Pexels / Photo by koolshooters)
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Fitness

Extreme fitness, viral videos could be boosting ‘rhabdo’ cases, health experts say | Globalnews.ca

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Extreme fitness, viral videos could be boosting ‘rhabdo’ cases, health experts say  | Globalnews.ca

Viral videos and “fitspiration” trends can sometimes do more harm than good, according to health experts.

One Atlantic province has already seen a rise in a rare and potentially life-threatening condition that can be caused by overexertion, known as rhabdomyolysis or rhabdo.

The syndrome is caused by rapid muscle breakdown and can be the result of extreme exercise, according to Dr. Ryan Henneberry, a Halifax-based sports medicine physician.

“(It can happen) especially in somebody who might have succumbed themself to exercise they hadn’t done in a while: the typical high-intense interval training, or the indoor cycling that’s common now,” he said.

It occurs when damaged cells release toxins into the blood, which can lead to severe issues, including kidney failure.

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“One might see the hallmark or classic tea-coloured urine, or darker urine or brown urine, and that would usually be associated with some form of muscle weakness or muscle pain,” said Henneberry.

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Newfoundland and Labrador Health Services said last month it confirmed about 20 cases in the eastern part of the province in the span of six months. Doctors typically expect to see a few cases a year, said Dr. Richard Barter, the clinical chief of emergency medicine in the authority’s eastern urban zone.

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“One doctor said they’ve seen seven cases in the last five months,” said Barter.

Most of those cases were among women aged 19 to 30. And health officials believe social media may play a role.

“There is a culture right now to do extreme activities,” said Barter.

“We suspect that there’s a lot of posting on social media about what you’ve done, the number of reps that you’ve done, how high you’ve got your heart rate … there’s a friendly jousting competitiveness going on.”

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Busting fitness myths: From metabolic conditioning to cortisol levels



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Elsewhere in Atlantic Canada, Nova Scotia Health said it has not seen any significant increases in rhabdo cases. Health authorities in New Brunswick did not provide data before deadline.

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Laura Perry, a personal trainer and owner of East Coast Barbell in Dartmouth, N.S., said preventing rhabdo means taking exercise slow — and low.

“We’re not going from zero to 100 in the very first day. We’re starting small and we’re learning how to move our bodies efficiently and safely,” said Perry.

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“Working out six days a week is not twice as good as working out three days a week. It doesn’t work in that way. The most important thing is to choose a routine that you can do consistently. That you have time to recover from.”

Others believe self-compassion can help, too.

While social media pressure may encourage intense workouts for some, it’s important to pause and consider the impacts.

“It could be really just recognizing that these are large systemic and often profitable industries that are perpetuating these messages,” said Eva Pila, an assistant professor at Western University School of Kinesiology.

“We need to adopt more kind, understanding and empathetic ways of relating to ourselves.”

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— With a file from The Canadian Press

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Fitness

Put the fun back in your fitness routine with this 10-minute follow-along workout from The Curvy Girl Trainer Lacee Green

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Put the fun back in your fitness routine with this 10-minute follow-along workout from The Curvy Girl Trainer Lacee Green

Ever feel like beginner-friendly workouts are anything but?

That’s how BODi Super Trainer Lacee Green felt, so she devised a three-week, entry-level program designed for genuine newcomers to exercise—or those just getting back into it.

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Fitness

Higher fitness levels linked to lower risk of depression, dementia – Harvard Health

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Higher fitness levels linked to lower risk of depression, dementia – Harvard Health
research review

People with high cardiorespiratory fitness were 36% less likely to experience depression and 39% less likely to develop dementia than those with low cardiorespiratory fitness. Even small improvements in fitness were linked to a lower risk. Experts believe that exercise’s ability to boost blood flow to the brain, reduce bodywide inflammation, and improve stress regulation may explain the connection.

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