0861 THEBEMED [email protected]

0861 THEBEMED

Thebemed Logo

Accessible Care . Affordable Prices

Thebemed Wellness Cafe’

How do your emotions affect your health?

Aug 31, 2021 | Blog, Flavor Of The Month, The Juice, Thebemed

Thebemed Wellness Cafe’

How do your emotions affect your health?

Slow down for a few seconds, tune into your inner experience, and ask yourself:

“How am I feeling right now? Sad, angry, happy, hopeful, excited, anxious…?”

On an average day, we are often so busy focusing on tasks that we don’t pay attention to our emotions. And yet really, our emotions can actually affect our health.

The hormones of emotion

There are 4 major hormones that shape our emotional experience: Endorphins, Serotonin, Dopamine and Oxytocin.

  1. Endorphins are released when we exercise, or for example when we have a good laugh at a hilarious stand-up comedian. Such emotions; a sense of ease, or enjoyment and happiness, release the ‘happy hormones’.
  2. Dopamine is often associated with completing a task, big or small. Like when you complete a Sudoku-puzzle, buy a new dress, finish your chores, or finalize a presentation for work. These experiences can trigger a release of Dopamine into your system, making you feel a sense of accomplishment and release.
  3. Serotonin is a key hormone for stabilizing mood and helping us feel happy. With too little serotonin, we may become depressed. Anti-depressant medication generally helps stabilize serotonin levels.
  4. Oxytocin is also known as the love-drug. It’s associated with empathy, trust, sexual activity and child-birth.

How emotions affect your health

Your lifestyle affects your hormones. If you are under a lot of stress, don’t sleep enough hours at night, or eat an unhealthy diet; all of these can affect your hormones, affecting your mood and, in turn, affecting your health.

Poor emotional health can lead to a weakened immune system, making us more prone to colds and other infections. Stress can also affect your DNA, leading to a shorter life-span.

What you can do about it

The more happy-hormones your system releases, the better you feel, and the better your health will be. Some easy ways to pay attention to this, include:

  1. Exercise: Running helps release endorphins, and also improves your general fitness and health. Try the MapMyRun App, or Strava to help track your runs, as well as getting some motivation from other runners.
  2. Connection with friends: By staying in touch with those close to us, we support the release of endorphins and oxytocin, and our stress-levels decrease. Want to make a few new friends? Why not try the Bumble-app?
  3. Have you fed your gut-bacteria recently? Fermented foods like kimchi, kefir, yoghurt and kombucha help stimulate the microorganisms in your gut, and they are responsible for 90% of your body’s serotonin. Happy gut = happy hormones = happy body.

Start these 3 simple habits today, to feel better and improve your health!

References:

Latest Posts

How is your resilience?

How is your resilience?

Life keeps throwing us challenges. As we saw with Covid-19, in this globally connected world we are all touched by whatever is happening, no matter how ‘far away’. Resilience is a key quality of those who are best able to respond.

Fully vaccinated? Now what?!

Fully vaccinated? Now what?!

Let’s be clear – there is no quick fix to immediately ‘boost’ your immunity – no ‘wonder supplement’ or ‘power food’ will suddenly strengthen your immune system. However, living a healthy lifestyle does go a long way to keep your immune system strong. This has been found in a recent study showing that exercise may strengthen the antibody response to vaccination – both the COVID-19 vaccines and the annual flu vaccines.

Current News: South Africa and Ukraine

Current News: South Africa and Ukraine

Here in South Africa, there seems to be two active responses on social media to the shock of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. One is a sense of outrage and sadness at the disruption and tragic loss of life. The other seems to be an almost flippant expression of gratitude for being far away ‘down south’ from the conflict zone.

Be mindful while living with cancer

Be mindful while living with cancer

What can those two illustrious South Africans, the late Archbishop Desmond Tutu and ex-President Nelson Mandela teach us about living with cancer?
In 1997 a concerned world heard that the man fondly known as ‘the Arch’, aged 65, had surgery for prostate cancer. A few years later in 2001, we were again shocked to hear that Madiba, aged 83, had also been diagnosed with prostate cancer.

What COVID-19 has taught us about human connection

What COVID-19 has taught us about human connection

One thing we have learned from the COVID-19 pandemic experience is that we are not happy when we are separated from others – loved ones, colleagues and even people we do not know. We like to go to restaurants, coffee shops and just hang around people. Not only do we like it, but the pandemic has also highlighted how we need connection for our mental and emotional wellbeing. Sometimes it seems that it is only when things are taken away, that we learn to appreciate their value and importance.

You May Also Like:

TB awareness – the role of chronic stress and mental health in disease risk

TB awareness – the role of chronic stress and mental health in disease risk

The pandemic has highlighted the idea of a disease being front and center in all aspects of our lives. However, for someone living with a chronic condition, this has been their reality long before COVID-19 came along, and the pandemic has simply made things worse.
Economic, social and psychological distress is common amongst those living with chronic conditions, such as tuberculosis (TB).

read more
Standing up for yourself and others

Standing up for yourself and others

Underlying all human rights is a deep respect for human life. There are those passionate people whose daily lives center around defending and upholding these precious rights so that we can all live in a more caring and just world. Each one of us can take inspiration from this and make choices that demonstrate how our own personal values uphold human rights.

read more