How to Defeat Fatigue and Boost Immunity

Are you feeling drained and fatigued as autumn rolls in? The combination of reduced daylight, rainy weather, and work-related stress can sap your energy and leave you yearning to stay cocooned under your cozy duvet. But don’t worry! In this blog post, you’ll find effective strategies to help you revitalize your energy levels, conquer fatigue, and bolster your immunity. Let’s explore how sleep, diet, and lifestyle changes can make a significant difference in your well-being during this season.

The Immunity-Sleep Connection

The relationship between sleep and immunity is undeniably vital. Sleep is your immune system’s best ally because during this time your body releases crucial proteins that combat infections, inflammation, and stress. However, inadequate sleep leads to a decreased production of these essential proteins, leaving your immune system vulnerable to illnesses and viruses.

Here are some tips for a good night’s sleep

1. Establish a Sleep Routine – To reap the benefits of restful sleep, establish a consistent bedtime and wake-up time, even on weekends. Resisting the urge to oversleep helps maintain your body’s biological clock, resulting in increased energy levels and improved productivity, especially on dreaded Mondays.

2. Determine Your Ideal Sleep Duration – The ideal amount of sleep varies from person to person. While adults generally need 7-9 hours, teenagers require 8-10 hours, and children thrive on 9-11 hours. Pay attention to how many hours leave you feeling refreshed because this is your optimal sleep duration.

3. Create a Relaxing Evening Routine – Enhance your sleep quality by incorporating these habits into your evening routine:

  • Avoid heavy and hard-to-digest meals before bedtime.
  • Replace caffeine with calming herbal teas like lavender.
  • Refrain from physical activity just before bedtime.
  • Power down electronic devices at least 30 minutes before sleep, opting for a soothing read with soft lighting instead.

4. Optimize Your Sleep Environment – Make these adjustments to create an optimal sleeping environment:

  • Select a pillow that maintains proper neck and head alignment.
  • Choose a medium-firm mattress that supports your lower back.
  • Ensure the mattress base is flat to prevent deformations.
  • Keep the room temperature between 18 and 20°C (64-68°F) for a comfortable night’s sleep.
  • Make the room as dark as possible to tell your body that it’s time to rest.

Recharge Your Energy Levels

Are you struggling to get up each morning, resorting to excessive coffee consumption to combat yawning? These challenges are common in the autumn and winter months when natural light diminishes, affecting both sleep and mood-regulating hormone production.

To maintain high energy levels, consider these lifestyle changes:

1. Prioritize a Balanced Diet – Embrace a healthy, balanced diet rich in whole grains, legumes, nuts, fruits, vegetables, and fish. Limit your consumption of fast sugars found in refined grains, sugary drinks, chocolate, and processed snacks to prevent energy crashes.

2. Practice Physical Activity – Integrate physical activity into your daily routine by aiming for 10,000 steps a day. Simple changes like taking the stairs or going for a walk during your lunch break can significantly boost your energy levels.

To conclude, making these tips part of your daily routine can effectively banish fatigue, revitalize your energy levels, and fortify your immune system. By following them, you’ll be well on your way to a healthier and more energized you.

Are you ready to welcome newfound vitality this autumn? Embrace the season with confidence and vigor!

Get Your Energy Back by Following These 5 Tips

Summer brings back light and it is the perfect time to recharge your batteries and repair your body, your spirit and your soul. Find your energy to get a good start again.

Summer is a good season for renewal. Every sunny day is a new departure. Each morning represents a new chance to reach your goals and follow your dreams.  

To get the best out of this summer spirit, here are 5 tips to regain your well-being.

1. Take care of yourself and adopt a healthy sleep pattern. Sleep is essential for physical and mental well-being, specialists recommend sleeping between 7 and 9 hours per night. Feeling rested after a good night’s sleep allows you to better manage your energy during the day.

Tips: Plan your day the night before. In the evening, do restful activities. Create an environment favorable to rest by eliminating strong light and screens (TV, computer but also mobile phone) in your room. Practice yoga or meditation exercises.

2. Energy is on the plate. Breakfast is the most important meal of the day. With it, you establish the blood sugar level, avoid the cravings during the morning and give your body the energy it needs to function. Beware of some foods that could be counterproductive. Too sweet food gives you an immediate energy boost but, when over, it will leave you more tired than before.

Tips: Avoid sugars and caffeine in excess and favor food that makes you feel full, such as bananas or apples. Drink large quantities of green tea (which also helps weight loss and prevents cell aging). Buy fresh fruit and vegetables and try to eat less refined food (whole grains would be great). Make the menu of your week and fill up the fridge to avoid coming home hungry and having nothing to eat. By doing so, you will eat what you have and will not order food to be delivered at home. Establish a regular daily meal pattern. If you cannot cook, have you ever thought about learning it?

3. Meditation is useful for your well-being. We live at high speed. Sometimes this rhythm of life prevents us from fully living the things we do and focusing on them. Many activities can help us take better advantage of the present moment and meditation is at the top of the list. Before going to work, focusing on the rhythm of breathing (inhale and exhale) can help you face the day more calmly. Meditation has beneficial effects on the brain and general well-being.

Tips: Meditate every day at the same time: wake up your senses by disconnecting yourself for a few minutes. You do not have time? Try meditating in the shower or while you are on the bus or on the metro! It is enough to breathe with awareness. Relax while remaining alert. Follow your cat’s example, if you have one. But don’t meditate while driving!

4. Move to reduce your fatigue. Even if this statement may seem contradictory, sport is the best way to lighten your spirit up, remove your anxiety and regain your energy. Physical activity can stimulate the mitochondria, which are the generators of the body’s energy. So what are you waiting for? Put your sneakers on!

Tips: Walk at least 10,000 steps a day (I know, they are a lot). Try the sun salutation, a sequence of yoga positions that helps you release endorphins in the blood and then helps you be in a good mood and energized. Practice yoga, Pilates, take a bike ride or a walk with your colleagues. Walk with awareness, focusing on each one of your steps and trying to feel the contact with the ground from the top of your heels to the tip of your toes.

5. More emotional balance for more energy. We often overlook the importance of emotional balance in everyday life. The harmony of the emotions can help us feel better and improve our relationships with others. Pay attention to your emotions and learn to manage them. Do not prevent yourself from expressing them, in the appropriate ways and occasions, of course, otherwise you risk that they would become too intense and then you will no longer take control over them. Take full advantage of positive emotions and try to accept your feelings in moments of sadness or distress. Emotions have their reason for being: they are the ones who determine our actions.

Tips: Try looking at things from a broader perspective: everything in life is useful, even if it does not seem like that. Try not reacting immediately, breathe deeply and remind yourself that it will go away. If you really have to take a position, count up to ten before speaking. Set goals regularly to get the best out of yourself by living again your feelings or thoughts.

What do you think about those simple tips?

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How and Why Fighting Your Stress Is Important

I’m sure you use the word stress often throughout your day.

We all feel a little stressed due to the multiple commitments we have, pending deadlines, and lack of time to dedicate to ourselves.

The common denominator of all forms of stress is a feeling of malaise, fatigue, irritability that makes us more fragile with illness and less tolerant of others and of daily problems.

Actually stress is an adaptive response that has allowed our species to survive throughout its evolution.

Hans Seyle, the first theorist of stress, conceived it as an adaptive response that the body puts into force to overcome all the situations that its alarm systems deem dangerous.

The stress reaction is indeed characterized by the secretion of hormones such as cortisol and adrenaline which make the muscles stronger and the person more reactive. In this sense, stress has a value that is not only positive but also necessary for the survival of the species.

Primitive men had to face dangers that were of a short duration. While they were hunting, for example, they might encounter an animal and had to decide whether to run away or face it (have you ever heard of the “fight or flight” response?), but once they made up their mind and acted accordingly, they had plenty of time to recover.

Photo by Crawford Jolly on Unsplash

In the contemporary age, we too have this type of reaction when facing what, on a conscious or unconscious level, we perceive as dangerous (stressor). But today’s stressors are definitely different from those our ancestors faced. Modern stressors are psychosocial and no longer physical. It’s about the work environment, social relationships, financial worries, the huge amount of commitments we have and the limited time to complete them. Above all, these stressors are not momentary but can persist for a long time and consequently we need more time to recover.

Look at these signs that may indicate that stress is becoming a threat to your health:

  1. Discomfort with sounds and lights
  2. Muscle pains, contractures and cramps
  3. Headache
  4. Sleeping Disorders
  5. Cardiac arrhythmia
  6. Hypertension
  7. Digestive difficulties
  8. Anxiety
  9. Depression
  10. Irritability
  11. General fatigue

What can you do concretely to combat stress, when the conditions in which you find yourself do not allow you to avoid it?

Physical activity, especially aerobic, such as brisk walking, swimming and cycling, is undoubtedly one of the best remedies for stress.

Breathing control, like getting used to using the diaphragm and slowing the respiratory rate, is another useful tool against stress.

Other activities may be: yoga, tai chi and meditation. In recent years, mindfulness has become popular. Mindfulness, by increasing the level of personal awareness, carries out an anti-stress action.

Obviously, a good massage that helps you increase the level of oxytocin, a hormone capable of counteracting cortisol, is certainly effective.

As regards food supplement, magnesium is the anti-stress mineral for excellence, also because we are chronically deficient. Remember that a supplement is such because it must be complementary to a healthy diet. Therefore, remember to eat well!

What about you? What are the solutions you adopt to fight your stress?

Photo by Sharon Wright on Unsplash