Friday, December 11, 2015

Biodots - Small Circles Test Your Stress by Measuring Hand Temperature


Biodots - Small Circles Test Your Stress by Measuring Hand Temperature 

Stress Market - store for stress education

by Dr. Tim Lowenstein (c) 2015

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Biodots are small, liquid crystal circles that CHANGE COLORS as temperature changes. Use adhesive back to stick the Stress Point to tense areas. Inexpensive and unbreakable, 10 degree range from 79.6° F. to 89.6° F. Great handout at fairs, lectures and groups. Some people refer to these as Biodots, Biodot Skin Thermometer, bio-dots, stress dots. They are quite small - 1/4" circle = 6.35 mm. Stress Points/Biodots instruction sheet

Stress - Warm hands Relaxed, Cold hand Stressed



Hand temperature under stress has a much wider range of temperature. Body Temperature changes under Stress. Under stress muscles tense and blood flow is restricted to the main body and shut down from the hands and feet. Stress Level Rule - Warm Hands Relaxed, Cold Hands Tense. Hand/foot temperature ranges over 40° from a low of 60° to as high as 99°  F. Changes of 5° or more can take place in seconds.
Stress Thermometer - skin temperature biofeedback

The Stress Thermometer is an inexpensive, digital thermometer that provides professional feedback of the full range of the over 40 degree temperature change in hand temperature. This is critical feedback to raise awareness of subtle or small changes in hand temperature.  The feedback is very important to practice the skill of relaxation and see the responding increase in hand temperature.

Free Instruction Guide to Biodots

Specifically, for migraine headaches this feedback is important in 2 respects.

1. Simple and small temperature drops start very slowly. The drop in hand temperature is the beginning onset of a migraine. If it is not stopped, that drop in hand temperature will increase until the migraine rages making normal life very difficult.

2. Practicing scientific methods of relaxation, the Stress Thermometer will show any success in stopping the drop in temperature. With additional mastery, you learn to relax so that more blood flows out to the hands. This reverses the progression of the building migraine headache.

From the simple Biodot to the more sophisticated, Stress Thermometer, you can learn to relax and control stress. We are here to help.

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Tuesday, December 8, 2015

9 Tips To Tame Work Stress

9 Tips To Tame Work Stress

By Laura McMullen for U.S. News
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Stress can help you perform better and work harder both in the workplace and elsewhere. But sometimes too much of even "good" stress can be overwhelming and lead to fantasies of curling into the fetal position under the desk, familiarizing co-workers with a specific finger or simply walking out the door forever. Let's not let it come to that. These tips will help you find calm, focus and even a little happiness during your most stressful workplace moments.
1. Switch tasks.
"If you have the flexibility to do something else, get into a task that's going to take your attention away from whatever is frustrating you," says David Reiss, a psychiatrist based in San Diego. This can apply to co-workers, too. Put aside that exasperating email thread with Bob. Take a break from that project you’ve been stewing over for the last few hours, and work on something else for a while.
2. Help out.
It feels good to be nice, so Gretchen Rubin, author of The Happiness Project, suggests doing a good deed to ease workplace frustrations. Email a co-worker helpful information, make an introduction or simply lend a hand to whomever is changing the copier paper, she says.
3. Slow down with mindful meditation.
For those moments when you feel swept in the current of deadlines, emails and phone calls -- when you can barely tread water -- try this technique called Instachill, from Victor Davich, author of 8 Minute Meditation: Quiet Your Mind. Change Your Life. First, close your eyes and take a big breath in, and then sigh it out. Now relax, breathe naturally and locate where in your body you feel stressed. Focus on this spot, while allowing those muscles to move naturally. When another thought drifts into your head, gently return your focus to the stress spot and stay there. After a few minutes, slowly open your eyes and note how you feel now -- hopefully your head is higher above the water.
Touch your neck - cold fingers tense, warm fingers relaxed.
4. Ease shoulder tension.
Stretching moves your muscles, releases tension and shifts your focus to your breath. Try this move that Tara Stiles, instructor behind the ulive.com video series Yoga Rebel, dubs "eagle arms," which releases shoulder tension. With a slight bend in your elbows, stretch your arms in front of you. Wrap one arm over the other, hook your hands and inhale deeply as you lift your arms straight up over your head. Now exhale. Added bonus: You can do this stretch while sitting at your desk.
5. And stretch your back and hamstrings, too.
Stiles suggests another stretch: Simply stand straight with your chest open and your arms loose, and take a big breath in. Breathe out as you bend forward, over your legs, with your knees slightly bent. Sway slightly. This stretch "gets the blood flowing to your head, so you feel more refreshed when you roll up to stand," says Stiles, adding that while it's a little more conspicuous than a seated move, "It's nice for when you're picking up a paper clip or something."
6. Move.
Jump up and down, do jumping jacks at your desk or skip around the room, Rubin suggests. "There's something very childlike and energetic about getting those feet off the ground," she says. "And you will feel very goofy if other people can see you, so that will affect your mood as well."

7. And if you're not feeling particularly goofy?
Run up and down the stairs, or go for a 10-minute walk -- preferably outside. “Moving around will boost your energy, but being in the sunlight will help even more,” says Rubin, pointing out that even on cloudy days, there’s more light outside than inside. “That in itself gives you a lift and helps your focus and mood.”

Mood Card or Stress Card to test for stress


8. Ask yourself: Is this stress or abuse?
If you’re swimming in workplace anxiety, Reiss says it’s key to differentiate between stress and abuse. And the line between the two is not always clear, so consider chatting with a third party, such as a human resources staff person or a friend who can be objective and tell it to you straight. “If it’s harassment that’s disrupting your ability to work, then you have to take appropriately assertive, calm actions.” (And that’s another article.)
Stress Thermometer - tests for stress. Our website or Amazon.com

9. Get some perspective.
If you’re miserable, look for another job, Reiss says. But if you're facing typical workplace stress -- frustrations, disappointments and personality conflicts -- consider Reiss' tough love: "That's why they call it work. You don't expect to go there and have fun," he says. "You expect to go there and get paid." Try to solidify boundaries. Remember that your co-workers are not your family members, and when you leave your workplace each day, you should leave your work, too. Focusing on the non-work aspects of your life, such as relationships and hobbies, will help you gain some perspective.

Less Stress, More Living Mindfulness, Work Life Balance, Burnout 

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Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Stress Meter - Glass Tube Thermometer simple, fast way to Test for Stress

Stress Meter - Glass Tube Thermometer simple, fast way to Test for Stress

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by Dr. Tim Lowenstein (c) 2014

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FREE Book - Be Stress Wise, by Dr Tim Lowenstein
Go to
bestresswisebook.com
and download your copy. Feel Free to share with friends.

Stress Meter. This was my first "invention" for Biofeedback back in the early 1970's. 





I adapted a small cardboard thermometer and redesigned it for biofeedback use. It was very popular until the late 1980s when biofeedback in general declined due to HMOs taking over American health care.

It is an excellent feedback tool since it measures the full range of stress as shown in hand temperature. The red bulb is extended below the card backing so the tube can easily be taped to the finger print to measure hand temperature.



This is our in stock, ready to ship Stress Meter ST77.


This simple, reusable Glass Tube thermometer shows 1 degree F. changes in the bright red, Non-Toxic, Oil Based Liquid. Simply tape or hold the exposed red bulb of the thermometer to your fingertip. Each person reads Stress Number Value, e.g. - 72, 83 or 92. Ideal for class or training group. Hold or tape red bulb to fingertip - Caution Glass with Non-toxic oil based liquid. Measures full range of temperature from 60 F to 98 F.

How Hand Temperature Relates To Stress - Under stress muscles tense and blood flow is restricted to the main body and shut down from the hands and feet. Stress Level Rule - Warm Hands Relaxed, Cold Hands Tense. Hand/foot temperature ranges over 40 degrees from a low of 60 degrees to as high as 99 degrees F. Changes of 5 degrees or more can take place in seconds.

Mood Cards, Stress Squares and Biodots measure temperature in a 10 degree range - Not the full 40 degrees.

So the Stress Meter is a better biofeedback tool. The major disadvantage is that it has a Glass Tube and that is breakable. It is filled with a non-toxic fluid. Not recommended for young children. Should be used under supervision and a competent trainer.

There is also the Plain Stress Meter ST60 that only has the thermometer scale with no information about stress.





We can customize the Personalized Stress Meter PST77 with your organization Logo and Address.


You can purchase them from our website
https://www.cliving.org/stressmeter.htm


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Dr. Weil - Ten Ways to Reduce Stress

Dr. Weil - Ten Ways to Reduce Stress
Stress Market - Your Stress Education Store

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http://www.drweil.com/drw/u/ART00536/reduce-stress.html

1) Breathing strongly influences mind, body and moods. By simply focusing your attention on your breathing, and without doing anything to change it, you move in the direction of relaxation. 

2) Progressive relaxation is a way of releasing tension in muscles. Often taught in yoga and exercise classes, on self-help tapes and by various instructors - from massage therapists to psychologists - there are many variations of progressive relaxation. 

Deep Muscle Relaxation

5) Visualization and guided imagery. While we all look at our internal images from time to time, especially when we daydream or fantasize, few of us have learned how to develop our imaging capacity and take advantage of its ability to affect our minds and bodies.

Guided Imagery Relaxation



6) Biofeedback. The idea of biofeedback is clever and simple: by using technology to help you learn faster relaxation, you can develop sensory awareness of an involuntary function and learn to change it. In a common biofeedback setup, temperature sensors are connected to your fingers, and skin temperature is converted to an audible signal, perhaps a beep tone: the faster the beeps, the higher the temperature. Your job is to make the beeps go faster by raising your skin temperature. The tone gives your ears and brain feedback from a body function that is ordinarily unconscious and beyond the reach of your will. Skin temperature is a measure of blood flow into the hands, and that is determined by the size of little arteries. The autonomic nervous system regulates this flow by causing arteries to constrict (sympathetic influence) or dilate (parasympathetic influence). In order to raise your skin temperature you have to relax your sympathetic nervous system. Unless you do this on a regular basis, you will have wasted your time and money, because the point is to incorporate what you learn into daily life. Ideally you should spend 15 to 20 minutes a day at this practice, preferably after a few minutes of progressive relaxation, visualization or meditation to set the stage.
Biofeedback works best for people whose tension is expressed in bodily complaints such as migraines, hypertension, cardiac arrhythmias, ulcers, chronic intestinal problems, Raynaud's disease and bruxism. It may also benefit those who feel they need outside help in learning to reduce anxiety and internal stress, or who doubt they can do it on their own. A typical biofeedback training program consists of 10 hour-long sessions, often spaced a week apart.

Biofeedback Machine



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Orders 1.800.578.7377 | Local 360.457.9223 | Fax 360.457.9466
Email us at info@stressmarket.com Skype Me™!
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