How to Boost Your Mood with 6 Daily Practices
Article At A Glance
Instead of starting your day feeling down or in despair, Health advocate Jon Barron shares six daily practices to boost your mood and help promote overall health and well-being.
Nearly seven percent of adults in the U.S. are suffering from severe clinical depression at any given time. Fifteen percent of us will endure paralyzing depression at some point in our lives. And 18 percent of us have an anxiety disorder at any given time. These figures don’t include those of us who feel blue, unmotivated, or mildly unenthusiastic about life. Major depression is more serious than that, more long-lasting (persists at least two weeks), and more likely to lead to suicide.
One thing about depression, whether mild or severe, is that it tends to color the day from the moment you wake. If you’re depressed, you’ll find yourself dragging out of bed in the morning, dreading the day ahead. Your day is already colored by depression before you walk out your door. It’s sort of like building a house on top of a cracked foundation or making a soup using a tainted broth. Everything added later is tainted because the base isn’t solid. Plus, it’s a huge health risk to start your day in a funk.
As Jon Barron points out in his book Lessons from the Miracle Doctors, “Statistically, it turns out that people are more likely to die on Monday morning before going to work than at any other time of the week. There has been much speculation as to why this happens, but in general, most people agree it’s something along the lines of: “Most people have heart attacks on Monday morning because they are stressed that they are heading back to jobs they can’t stand after a weekend off.”
How to Boost Your Mood with 6 Daily Practices
Instead of starting your day in despair, here are simple things you can do that might help to lift your mood.
1. Get Up Earlier
Research just completed by the University of Colorado in Boulder and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston found that women who are early risers have a lower incidence of depression than their peers. The study followed 32,000 nurses who were not depressed at the outset for two years.
After controlling for sleep duration, sleep quality, work shifts, exposure to light, weight, exercise, and so forth, the researchers concluded that those who went to bed early and got up early had up to a 27 percent lower chance of developing depression than the night owls.
While tucking in earlier alone might not obliterate the blues, it may give you a bit of a boost. Experts point out that your preference for early versus late rising, or “chronotype,” may be driven by genetics, but it can also be influenced by things such as exposure to natural light, diet, and exercise.
2. Start with Water
If you’re one of those people who sleepwalk to the coffee machine and downs a cup or so before you can function, you might benefit by drinking water first instead. Water gives your kidneys, liver, and digestive system a flush to help get rid of toxins that accumulate overnight, and if you’re dehydrated, drinking water will take care of that. (1)
Experts say warm lemon water is the best for getting the job done. Coffee, on the other hand, acts as a diuretic, dehydrating you even more. (2) Plus, coffee stimulates the digestive system to produce hydrochloric acid, particularly when consumed on an empty stomach, and that can deplete the system’s ability to produce adequate amounts of hydrochloric acid later on when you eat food. This can cause digestive problems and mineral deficiencies.
But most importantly, according to author Julia Ross, who wrote The Mood Cure, drinking coffee first thing leads to the underproduction of serotonin, which regulates mood. (3) That’s because coffee is an appetite suppressant and may lead to skipping or delaying breakfast, which will likely interfere with serotonin production. Ms. Ross suggests waiting until after breakfast for that first cup of Joe.
3. Use Neuroscience to Set Your Brain Right
Our brains have a negative bias. In other words, the brain holds onto bad experiences and tends to discard good ones. This is reflected in the fact that 62 percent of the words describing emotion in the English language have negative associations, while only 32 percent are positive.
When you’re already depressed, that negativity bias becomes even more pronounced. You feed your mind a steady diet of negative stories, and those stories keep building in your psyche, and the bias is so strong that simply telling yourself to cheer up is useless. Fortunately, neuroscience has discovered that we can create new, more positive neural pathways in the brain by learning how to focus on the positive. The key is to spend enough time dwelling on the positive for your brain to “digest” it, which means you need to spend a minimum of 12 seconds “drinking in” each positive experience you go through.
Otherwise, the brain tosses the positive experience and reverts to the negative state. It helps to start each day with a deliberate program to dwell on the positive, whether you create a gratitude journal or list happy memories from the previous day. One great tool to get you started on this path is a book called Just One Thing by Rick Hanson, who also wrote Buddha’s Brain: The Practical Neuroscience of Happiness, Love, and Wisdom. The book offers one technique a day for an entire year to help you recolor your psyche in more upbeat shades.
4. Ban Technology
At least 25 percent of US adults check their cell phones within a minute of waking up, and 80 percent check the phone within 15 minutes. There’s plenty of evidence that too much device time leads to depression and brain changes, as well as stress-related conditions such as hypertension, thyroid disease, heart failure, and coronary artery disease. Instead of reaching for the phone or the laptop, do your brain rewiring exercises and see how the day goes afterward.
5. Do Your Exercise
There are arguments for fitting in your exercise later in the day, but those who do it first thing reap rich benefits. For one thing, research shows that those who exercise early in the day are more likely to institute a regular workout regimen and tend to be more consistent. (4) Morning workouts have psychological advantages since exercising boosts mood-elevating hormones and endorphins to start your day, and the effects last for hours.
As Dr. Cedric Bryant of the American Council of Exercise says, “Morning workouts result in better energy levels throughout the day and give you more mental alertness and sharpness.… Plus, morning workouts can help you sleep better at night. A 2011 study at Appalachian State University found that participants who exercised at 7:00 a.m. reduced daytime blood pressure by 10 percent and evening blood pressure by 25 percent. They also slept longer and better than those who exercised at other times of the day.” Plus, morning exercisers had better results in the weight loss department than those who exercised later.
6. Feed Your Spirit
This is not the same thing as setting your brain right with positive programming. Feeding your spirit means underlining your connection to beauty, goodness, and if you’re so inclined, to purpose in the universe. You might accomplish this by meditating, practicing yoga, listening to inspiring music, or even praying.
There are many other things you can do first thing in the morning to promote well-being, and if you’re really depressed, it makes sense to also get counseling and take helpful supplements. But even if you only institute one of these six practices, you’ll likely see positive results sooner than otherwise. That said, the more of them that you make part of your life, the more positive the results you’re likely to experience.
Also, read...
5 Ways to Take Control of Emotions: A Guide to Mindful Awareness
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4 Causes of Physical and Mental Suffering: A Yogic Perspective
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How to Boost Your Mood with 6 Daily Practices
Sep 04 – Jon Barron
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Material originally published at www.jonbarron.org.
Copyright © 1999-2018. Baseline of Health® Foundation
Used by permission of the Baseline of Health® Foundation.
All rights reserved worldwide.
Jon Barron is the founder of the Baseline of Health® Foundation, whose website attracts millions of visitors worldwide so people can learn about health and nutrition for free. He has lectured internationally and has been featured on many regional and syndicated media programs as an expert in disease prevention, anti-aging, and nutrition.
References
- Costello, Emma. “This is the first thing you should drink when you get up in the morning.” 27 November 2017. RSVP Live. 7 February 2019. http://www.rsvplive.ie/life/health/first-thing-you-should-drink-11599162
- Budgen, Olivia. “Why you should drink water before your morning coffee.” 25 November 2017. Canstar Blue. 7 February 2019. http://www.canstarblue.com.au/appliances/why-you-should-drink-water-before-your-morning-coffee/
- Pope, Sarah, MGA. “Why You Need to Change WHEN You Drink Coffee.” The Healthy Home Economist. 7 February 2019. http://www.thehealthyhomeeconomist.com/why-you-need-to-change-when-you-drink-coffee/
- Skarnulis, Leanna. “What’s the Best Time to Exercise?” WebMD. 8 February 2019. http://www.webmd.com/fitness-exercise/features/whats-the-best-time-to-exercise#1
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