How To Beat A Bad Mood
Sigh if this has
happened to you: You're heading out the door, feeling reasonably upbeat -- your
outfit is cute, the weather is sunny. And then, wham! Your husband asks,
"Why do you look so tired?" You forgot your phone. Oops, it's dead.
And now you're late. A rotten mood builds. Though you're aware of what's
happening, you can't stop it.
It's probably not much
comfort to know that bad moods are having a moment: Americans reported record
high levels of negativity about the future in an NBC-Wall Street Journal poll.
"If things look uncertain, there's no question that people will be
crankier than normal," says Jair C. Soares, M.D., director of the
University of Texas Center of Excellence on Mood Disorders. Kicking it up
another notch is the amplification of social media (ISIS! Ebola!): "The
24/7 media frenzy of contemporary life makes people even more
apprehensive," Soares notes.
Meanwhile, we're in
one of the least perky times of year, which wears on some of us more than
others. A study published in the journal Emotion found that inclement weather
can make a person's foul mood even worse. It sure doesn't help when someone
tells you to cheer up. "You're not getting any empathy," points out
psychologist Guy Winch, Ph.D., author of Emotional First Aid, "and that
only makes you feel annoyed."
If reading this has
upset you, take heart: "It's important to have emodiversity -- a variety
of negative and positive feelings," says June Gruber, Ph.D., assistant
professor of psychology at the University of Colorado, Boulder. If we're never
out of sorts, we can't fully appreciate the sweetness of happiness. That said,
nobody wants a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day. The key to keeping it
cheerful: Squash that snit before it starts.
Here's how to tame your bad-mood triggers:
Soothe your grumpy mind-set.
Psychologists believe
that we're wired to react more strongly to crummy happenings than pleasant ones
-- that on-the-edge feeling lingers as a primitive form of self-protection. And
a combination of nature and nurture makes some of us moodier types. "Think
of emotional resilience like an immune system," Winch says. "There
are people who tend to have a stronger one than others." We're also likely
to model our parents' reactions, so if Dad flipped out about small stuff like
misplaced keys, you may have the same tendency.
Once you're sulky,
that state spirals; grouchy people view events through tunnel vision, finds
research in The Journal of Neuroscience. Subjects were hooked up to an MRI and
shown pictures of faces superimposed over images of houses. Those in meh moods
only took in information about the face; happier folks could also remember the
surroundings. Per the lead study author, good moods "enhance the literal
size of the window through which we see the world."
When certain
irritations are repeated enough, they turn into triggers that set us off even
when things aren't so bad, Winch says, "because they create a kind of
emotional wound." If you've dealt with a lot of computer crashes, for
example, then even just Chrome quitting on you could be maddening. And watch
out if the colleague in the next cubicle is a grump; a University of Notre Dame
study showed that negative thinking can be passed along from one person to
another, like the flu. We copy one another's nonverbal cues, including frowns
and grimaces, then internalize them.
What to do:
To help prevent a dour mood from brewing into a storm, take a
walk or try another change of environment to stop the cycle of rumination,
Gruber suggests. Or focus on doing just one thing, like crafting or cooking; a
recent Harvard University study found that bad moods were most apt to strike
when the subject's mind was wandering. If you're in danger of being infected by
a grouch, make like a public health expert and contain it. "When someone
is complaining, you can say, 'It sounds like that was very hard for you,' and
do not engage," says New York City psychologist Paulette Sherman. Instead,
go find someone perky: A Harvard and University of California, San Diego study
concluded that if a nearby friend is happy, you have a 25 percent higher chance
of feeling brighter.
Deal with your no-sleep situation.
The number of
Americans who get eight hours of shut-eye is at an all-time low, per a Gallup
poll -- so it makes sense that crankiness may be at an all-time high. Our
average is 6.8 hours a night, but it's not just quantity that's lacking --
quality is compromised by our inability to surrender our smartphones and
tablets until our heads hit the pillow. A survey by the marketing agency
Rosetta found that 68% of tablet owners use the device in the bedroom. Yet a growing
pile of studies assert that the blue light from gadgets ramps up our alertness
and disrupts our circadian rhythms.
Why does sleep
deprivation make us snappish? The emotional part of the brain, the amygdala, is
much more active when deprived of sleep, finds a study by Matthew P. Walker,
PhD, director of the Sleep and Neuroimaging Laboratory at the University of
California, Berkeley. Normally, the more rational prefrontal cortex would put
everything into context -- but when the brain is sleep-addled, this
relationship breaks down. Suddenly, your responses are less controlled—and you
wig out when someone cuts in front of you in the ATM line.
Adding to the problem
is our belief that we can power through fatigue, which only brings on more bad
moods. Walker compares this mind-set to that of drunk drivers. "After five
drinks, they may think they're fine to drive home, but they're markedly
impaired in their brain function," he says. "The same is true of
sleep: When people regularly get less than seven hours, we can measure
significant cognitive impairment."
What to do:
For sounder sleep, power down gadgets an hour before bed. If you
keep your iDevice in your bedroom, apply a blue-light protector film over the
screen. Mega-texters, take note: A new study from Washington and Lee University
in Lexington, Virginia, found that higher levels of texting were directly
associated with more sleep problems (likely from being too wired, literally and
figuratively).
Swiss researchers have
discovered this not-sexy-but-effective tip for better slumber: Wear socks to
bed. When your body has to work to redistribute heat from your core to the
extremities, the process upsets the natural release of the sleep-giving hormone
melatonin. Or try the "quiet ears" technique from the University of
Maryland's Sleep Disorders Center: Lie on your back with your eyes shut. Place
your hands behind your head and put your thumbs in your ears so you close the
ear canal. Listen to this soothing, rushing sound and off you go to dreamland.
The morning after a night when you've skimped on rest, do a few minutes of
meditation; it has been shown to boost energy and dampen the production of
stress hormones.
Stop the stress tornado.
Anxiety has the
unfortunate habit of also making you crotchety. It's similar to toddler
behavior, Dr. Soares says: "Getting worked up overstimulates our minds,
and it's hard to come down." One Swiss research team recently unearthed
the key connection between frayed nerves and bad moods: When triggered by
stress, an enzyme attacks a synaptic molecule in the brain that usually
regulates mood.
What to do: Prevent
that giant list of to-dos from freaking you out: "Research shows that just
jotting down quick ideas for tackling things is enough to eliminate mental
nagging and improve your mood," Winch says.
Of course, exercise is
the magic bullet for stress reduction. Even moderate workouts help spur the
release of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), reversing the negative
effects of stress. Hanging outdoors is another good idea: An analysis of 10
studies published in the journal Environmental Science & Technology found
that people's stress levels dropped if they walked in a natural setting, like a
park.
Also consider the tea
cure; a study in Psychopharmacology found that downing a few cups of black tea
daily lowered people's cortisol levels (a hormone tied to stress) by 47
percent. If nothing else, popping a piece of gum in your mouth may help,
according to a recent study that found that keyed-up people had lower saliva
levels of cortisol after chewing gum.
Head off hangry.
There's a reason you
get prickly when your stomach has been empty for too long: Skipping meals
causes fluctuations in serotonin, the brain chemical responsible for mood
balance. When your blood sugar plummets, loved ones may suffer along with you
(as your partner might well know): A new study of married couples from Ohio
State University found that people with low blood sugar were much more likely
to get angry at their spouse.
Refined sugar is
another crabbiness culprit. That vending-machine candy bar will spike your
blood sugar—then plunge both it and your mood lower. Down too much sugar and
the brain's reward system goes through withdrawal if you don't give it a
constant supply, says Nicole Avena, Ph.D., assistant professor at the Icahn
School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. "The resulting 'sugar
rage' looks like what you'd see if there was an addiction to something like nicotine,"
she says. "There have been lab studies on rats who eat sugar where the
rats will actually bite investigators when they take it away because they're so
angry."
What
to do:
Eat every three to
four hours or so if you're prone to food mood swings, choosing unprocessed
foods as much as possible. Regularly nosh on good-mood foods. Stick with your
resolve to avoid trans fats; researchers at the University of California, San
Diego have discovered a link between trans fats and irritability (it's been
shown that they interfere with the production of mood-stabilizing omega-3s).
Oh, and if you need to have a difficult conversation with your mate, it
couldn't hurt to first have some protein. Major issue? Break out the
porterhouse steaks.
By Jancee Dunn
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/02/28/beat-bad-mood_n_6753266.html?ncid=newsltushpmg00000003&ir=Indi
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