Saturday, July 18, 2020
How Your Attitude and Self-Talk Affect Stress
How Your Attitude and Self-Talk Affect Stress    Stress Management            Management Techniques          Print                  How to Change Your Self-Talk and Reduce Stress            By                Elizabeth Scott, MS                twitter                      Elizabeth Scott, MS, is a wellness coach specializing in stress management and quality of life, and the author of 8 Keys to Stress Management.      Learn about our   editorial policy        Elizabeth Scott, MS          Updated on August 04, 2019                    How Stress Impacts Your Health                      Overview             Signs of Burnout             Stress and Weight Gain             Benefits of Exercise             Stress Reduction Tips             Self-Care Practices             Mindful Living                                  Hero Images/Getty Images          Itâs well-known in the therapeutic community that negative statements from others can erode our sense of self-worth. Children tend to believe negative assessments of them from teachers and parents and develop a compromised self-concept when criticized on a regular basis.        Researchers estimate  that itâs necessary for the ratio of positive-to-negative comments be at least five to one for a relationship to be healthy and survive long-term. For these reasons, weâre taught not to let others put us down.          Sometimes the person eroding our sense of self-worth and limiting our potential is us.      Thatâs right, our self-talk, or the words our inner dialogue uses when we think, can increase our stress levels, limit our potential, and color our experience with a negative pen. Here are some more detailed reasons why this happens, with links to resources you can use to change your mind and turn self-sabotage into self-mastery.         Language Colors Experience      Though itâs not clear as to  what extent this occurs, it has been found that the types of words we use can alter expectations and even our perceptions of reality. For example:        If youâve been told that a difficult person is âa nightmare to work withâ, you will probably perceive that person as more frustrating than if youâve been told theyâre âparticularâ or âsomewhat demandingâ.If your dentist tells you, âThis will hurt. A lot!â, you will probably find a procedure more painful than if youâve been told âYou may experience some discomfort.âResearch has found that people who speak different languages may see the same things differently based on the words their language uses to describe these things. For example, studies show that language can affect the perception of color. (People who spoke a certain language that classifies blue and green as different shades of the same color were less able than English speakers to differentiate colors that toed the line between blue and green.) These effects influence the right brain more than the left, but the influence is clearly significant.        As it subtly colors what you perceive and what you dwell on, negative self-talk can alter your experience of stress in the following ways.         Increased Perception of Stress      When your self-talk is negative, you may perceive things as more stressful. For example, when you tell yourself something is difficult or unfair, it becomes more stressful to deal with than if you tell yourself itâs a challenge or even a test.          Using self-talk that is optimistic rather than pessimistic has stress management benefits, productivity benefits, and even health benefits that have been proven by research.       Self-Limitation      If you say âI canât handle this,â you more likely canât. This is because your subconscious mind tends to believe the thoughts it hears. You can limit your abilities by telling yourself you âcanât,â that âthis is too hardâ or that you âshouldnât even try.â         Limited Thinking      When you tell yourself you canât handle something (or some other self-limiting thought), you tend to stop looking for solutions. For example, notice the difference between telling yourself you canât handle something and asking yourself how you will handle something. Doesnât the second thought feel more hopeful and produce more creativity? Negative self-talk tends to be a self-fulfilling prophecy.        Stopping negative thoughts and creating habitually positive internal dialogue can reduce stress and empower you. Here are some resources to help you change negative self-talk into positive self-talk.  
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