Can’t Relax? Here’s the Solution

5 min read

Education & Career Trends: March 6

Curated by the Knowledge Team of  ICS Career GPS


Set up some goals for relaxing that you can accomplish.

Article by F. Diane Barth, published on psychologytoday.com


It happens to high-powered executives, teachers, and stay-at-home parents. It happens to high school and college kids, even to youngsters in elementary and middle school. It happens to almost all of us. We finally get some time off. We’re going to relax and restore ourselves. But somehow, it doesn’t seem to happen.

What is wrong here? Why can’t we relax?

Just for the fun of it, do a quick web search for “relax.” A Google search came up with 362,000,000 responses. That number, without even looking at the results themselves, tells us two things. First, we are desperate to find ways to unwind; and second, we may be going about it the wrong way.

By now, we all know that our bodies affect our minds and that our minds affect our bodies. To stay healthy, we know we must have well-exercised, well-rested, and well-fed bodies; and we know that the same is for mental health and productivity as well. So we work at exercising, work at eating the way we’re supposed to, and work at playing.

What’s wrong with this picture?

Physiologically, stress, anxiety and even depression trigger the sympathetic nervous system—home of the famous “fight or flight” mechanism. Scientific research suggests that when we stress about relaxing, or when we demand that our bodies exercise too much (as in training for a race) we simply cannot let go enough. You may be having trouble enjoying your time off because you are working too hard at relaxing.

What does this mean?

First, we live in a world that makes it hard to unwind. The demands of daily life are intense and never-ending. We have come to equate success with achievement, and achievement with happiness. Furthermore, research has shown that stress, anxiety, and depression, which come on the heels of this kind of non-stop pressure to achieve, physically interfere with the body’s relaxation mechanisms. And of course focusing on relaxation as yet another high-pressure goal (I must relax, I must relax, I must relax) is not going to cut it.

We need to think about learning to relax differently.

We are biologically programmed to learn and grow from the moment of our birth; yet the structured, formal learning well-meaning parents impose on their little ones often interferes with their love of learning, and also interrupts the natural balance of work and play that we are also pre-programmed with.

So then we feel uncomfortable. When we feel guilty about relaxing, we often mean that we have made so many plans for ourselves that we cannot possibly accomplish them all. Most of us do not read the classic novels clean up the messy file drawers or take the French lessons that we set as goals for the summer. We get back to work without having lost five pounds running every day or written all of the thank-you notes.

We haven’t mastered anything, but most especially, we haven’t mastered the art of relaxing.

So if you are looking at your calendar and realising that time is speeding by, you haven’t yet started to feel calm, here are some suggestions. Some of these are traditional ways of relaxing, but the goal here is to use a wish to master the art of relaxation as your motivation for relaxing.

  1. Set yourself the task of learning how to relax. Lowering your heartbeat, calming your spirit, and resting your psyche, brain, and body are not easy or simple jobs. They have to be learned. And your vacation time is the time to start to learn them.
  2. Choose one or two mechanisms for doing this, and pursue them in a structured way throughout your vacation. Meditation, yoga, and breathwork have been shown to have powerful effects on the body and the mind. Make this vacation a time when you begin to learn to do one of them. Take a class, or read a book about them, but make learning one of them a priority.
  3. Or learn something else that has a reputation for calming. Learn to knit (again, there are books, classes, and individual teachers available at most knitting and many crafts shops) or to sew, paint, draw, and cook—something that will motivate you to do something relaxing.
  4. Practice sleeping.
  5. Practice resting.
  6. Practice staring into space.
  7. Assign yourself a certain number of really pleasurable books or television shows or movies to watch on your vacation.
  8. Decide on a certain number of slow, calm bike rides or walks to take while you are not at work, and work to make sure that you take that many, or more.

The point, as you can see, is to set up some goals for relaxing that you can accomplish. If you believe you can master these goals, you will be motivated to work towards them.


Have you checked out yesterday’s blog yet

7 Strategies To Help You Focus Better


(Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in the article mentioned above are those of the author(s). They do not purport to reflect the opinions or views of ICS Career GPS or its staff.)

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