We are accustomed to separating the body and the soul. Health is for the doctor, and mental balance for the psychologist. But modern science and ancient practices claim the opposite: the body and psyche are a unified system. Chronic back pain may be a result of suppressed anger, and depression often starts with lack of sleep and a lack of vitamin D. In this article, we discuss how physical health affects mental peace and vice versa, and what to do to achieve harmony.
Have you noticed: after running or swimming, your mood improves? It's not just "endorphins," but a whole cascade of reactions. Physical activity reduces cortisol levels (the stress hormone) and increases sensitivity to dopamine and serotonin. Regular exercise (even a 20-minute walk) reduces anxiety by 30-40%. Conversely, a lack of movement leads to apathy and depression. Not surprisingly, office workers who sit in front of computers all day have a 50% higher risk of mental disorders. Our body is a biochemical laboratory, and its adjustment begins with muscles and joints.
Insomnia not only irritates but also ruins the psyche. During sleep, the brain is cleansed of toxins (including beta-amyloid, associated with Alzheimer's disease), processes emotions, and consolidates memory. Chronic sleep deprivation (less than 6 hours a day) increases the risk of depression by 2-3 times. The feedback loop: anxiety hinders sleep, and a lack of sleep exacerbates anxiety. Break it by sleeping hygiene: a dark cool room, avoiding gadgets an hour before bedtime, a routine. Physical health begins with a night's rest.
The gut is called the "second brain." There, 90% of serotonin — the happiness hormone — is produced. If you eat fast food, sweets, drink alcohol, you disrupt the microbiome. Inflammation in the gut is transmitted to the brain, causing "food depression." Conversely, a diet rich in fiber, vegetables, fermented products (sauerkraut, kefir), omega-3 fatty acids (fish, nuts) reduces anxiety and stabilizes mood. A lack of vitamins (D, B12, magnesium) also hits the psyche. Therefore, a plate is not only fuel but also a medicine.
Chronic pain (back, joints, migraines) is unbearable not only physically but also mentally exhausting. It makes a person irritable, loses interest in life, and isolates themselves. 40% of people with chronic pain suffer from depression. Treatment of pain should include not only painkillers but also psychotherapy (CBT, relaxation techniques). Conversely, working with psychosomatics sometimes relieves pain when doctors find organic causes.
Breathing is the only vegetative function that we can control consciously. By slowing down the exhalation, we activate the parasympathetic nervous system (rest, peace). Breathing exercise activates the sympathetic (attack, stress). Simple breathing practices (square breathing: 4-4-4-4) reduce cortisol levels in 5 minutes. It's a free prescription-free antidepressant.
Stress, anxiety, suppressed anger lead to an increase in cortisol. And it suppresses the immune system (more frequent colds), increases blood pressure, promotes obesity (belly fat), worsens memory. Chronic stress is a risk factor for heart attacks and strokes. Conversely, calmness, optimism, the ability to forgive and thank correlate with lower levels of inflammation in the blood. Mental balance is not "lazy happiness" but active work on perception that prolongs life.
Start small: 15 minutes of exercise in the morning (it speeds up blood flow and boosts mood). Replace a sweet snack with an apple or nuts. Go to bed at the same time (even on weekends). Spend 5 minutes every day in silence (without a phone). Go for a walk (sunlight synthesizes vitamin D). Communicate with pleasant people. Do not hold emotions inside: scream into a pillow, write letters that you won't send. And remember: body and psyche are communicating vessels. Treating one without the other is like fixing a phone without touching the battery.
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