Lower Your Blood Pressure Naturally: Step 9

Lower Your Blood Pressure Naturally - The Complete 9 Step Guide

This webpage is a companion to Step 9 of our book:
Lower Your Blood Pressure Naturally – The Complete 9 Step Guide

Step 9 discusses the role of stress in high blood pressure and the many different techniques you can use reduce stress and relax more, not just to lower your blood pressure but to improve your quality of life generally. There’s even one simple method which will lower your blood pressure within minutes!
Click here for more information on the book: Lower Your Blood Pressure Naturally

 

Relax… Relaxation for lowering blood pressure

 

We have more information about stress and blood pressure in our article here:
Stress and Hypertension

Dealing with Stress

There are myriad on-line resources for helping you deal with stress, so search around. Here are an article to start you off:
Web MD – More relaxation techniques

How to Relax: Techniques to Reduce Stress

Meditation

There are many resources on-line for meditation too – tips on meditation, guided meditations – and for a range of different approaches to meditation. It won’t be hard to find one that suits you.

About Meditation
How to Meditate: Easy Meditation Techniques for Beginners to Meditate Properly (SoMuchYoga.com)
Wikipedia – Research on meditation

Meditation tips

Meditation tips for beginners (Psychology Today)

Guided Meditations

A guided meditation audio track is available to play here:

More also on: Guided meditation for stress relief (Fragrant Heart)

There’s also a meditation app – with all kinds of guided meditations for different circumstances and situations. Although we haven’t tried it ourselves yet, it has been highly recommended by others: Headspace

Meditation and other activities for mindfulness and relaxation

How to counter the physiological effects of stress (Psychology Today) – explains what’s called the ‘relaxation response’ and how to elicit it using a simple form of meditation

The Relaxation Response (Mindful Medicine) – a good and simple explanation of how our bodies become stressed and how to induce relaxation, with a few suggestions of different methods you can use

 

Progressive Muscle Relaxation and Body Scanning

Here are some links for audio guides to progressive muscle relaxation (PMR). Or just search online, have a wee listen and go for the one whose voice you like best.
Guided PMR by Malcolm Huxter

 

Yoga

Good beginner’s guide to yoga and its benefits:
The Ultimate Beginner’s Guide to Yoga

Some poses and stretches that may help with high blood pressure:
Yoga for high blood pressure (Healthline.com)

 

Have a Laugh

A bit about laughter therapy:
Laughter therapy (The Guardian newspaper)
Laughter Online University – free laughter resources
Laughter Yoga International

Laughter club:
Laughter Online University – Community Laughter Clubs

 

Improve your motivation and mood generally

Some issues to do with your mood, stress levels and sleep quality are related to the regulation of certain brain chemicals and hormones. This article, suggested by a reader of the website, discusses dopamine levels, how they affect your well-being, and how you can improve them:
Boost your dopamine levels

 

Be Well Rested

Have a nap!

More and more research is now showing that taking a daily midday nap is linked with lower blood pressure and better heart health. Napping for up to an hour a day seems to be best, but even if you can’t manage a nap every day, taking a nap even occasionally may help.

 

Other things which reduce stress and increase being at ease

Think about how you think

There are a wealth of self-help resources online with psychological tips and guidance on dealing with stress, as well as information on finding a psychologist or therapist if you think you could benefit from more one-on-one advice or support.

Below is information on a few tried and tested approaches which have been successfully used to reduce stress, including Cognitive Behavour Therapy and Mindfulness approaches to stress reduction.

This free e-book may also be a good starting point. It’s a 17 page report which identifies 7 ways of thinking and acting that make us likely to feel stressed, then goes on to suggest ways to overcome these stress-inducing approaches and take a more relaxing attitude towards yourself, life and living.

Just click here to download it for free: 7 Mistakes that Lead to Stress

 

Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT)

About CBT:
Patient.info – about CBT

CBT self-help resources:
Self Help CBT (this section is specifically about stress: Self Help – CBT and stress)

 

CBT practitioners and services:

UK:
CBT therapist.com

US:
National Association of Cognitive-Behavioural Therapists

Australia:
CBT Australia

 

Mindfulness approaches to stress reduction

Mindfulness-based Stress Reduction (MBSR) is a program developed at the University of Massachusetts but other institutes and practitioners also use elements of it:
Wikipedia – MBSR

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) is similar to CBT in some ways but draws from mindfulness approaches in focusing more on accepting our difficult experiences, emotions and reactions rather than changing them – based on the sense that it’s lack of acceptance of our experiences and ourselves that can be at the root of a lot of our stress.

This article is quite in-depth, but does have good summaries of the main elements of ACT:
Psychology Today – ACT

Eating (and drinking) well

Mood-boosting foods?

And here are a few resources to investigate:

WebMD – Food, Mood and Serotonin – a brief summary of food, mood and serotonin
Psychology Today – Carbohydrates and Serotonin – thorough explanation of how food affects serotonin production, following with advice on how this affects weight gain and loss
Mark’s Daily Apple – serotonin boosters –  one man’s take on foods and activities which boost your mood

 

Send us your ideas and suggestions

If there are other websites, resources or products you’ve found useful and you think would be useful to others, please email them to us and we’ll include them: simon [at] highbloodpressurebegone.com

 

relaxation for lowering blood pressure - read our guideNOTE: This page is designed to be a companion page to Step 9 of our guide, ‘Lower Your Blood Pressure Naturally’. As such, it only contains supplementary resources rather than being a full discussion of stress and blood pressure and the various methods of reducing both.
For more information on relaxation for lowering blood pressure, you can further browse this website or, of course, buy the guide..!
Click here for details: Lower Your Blood Pressure Naturally – The Complete 9 Step Guide

 

 

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2 comments

  • Beth Bartson

    This information is very helpful. I recently purchased your book and wanted to communicate about some information in it. Is this the only way to contact you? There was no email given with download link.

  • Hi Beth,

    You can email us here: admin at highbloodpressurebegone.com

    We would love to hear from you.

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