Targeted Relaxation Techniques While In
Flight
Try these
relaxation techniques that target specific parts of the
body:
The Five Finger Exercise
-In a
relaxing chair, sit back and take a few deep
breaths.
-Next,
establish an easy, regular breathing pattern.
-Take in a
deep breath and as you exhale, touch your index finger to
your thumb. Imagine a time when your body felt a healthy
tired, like how you felt after a good tennis match, or just
stepping out of a hot tub or sauna....
-Now, take
another good deep breath, and as you exhale, touch middle
finger to your thumb. Imagine a time when you
had an especially loving experience, when you felt warm and
safe. Take a moment to really feel that same feeling as
vividly as you had experienced it....
-Next,
take another deep breath, and as you exhale, touch your ring
finger to your thumb and imagine a time when you performed
especially well, when you aced something that was important
to you. Take that feeling of accomplishment in now and feel
it as fully now as you did then...
-Lastly,
take one more very deep breath in and as you exhale, touch
your little finger to your thumb and as you do, imagine
seeing the most beautiful place you have ever
experienced...or imagine how you would feel being there
now...Take a moment to fully absorb the fullness of what you
feel being there.... and when you're entirely ready, and
bringing with you all of these same feelings for the rest of
your day, come back...
Practice Progressive
Relaxation
In the
early 1920’s, Edmund Jacobson developed Progressive
Relaxation.
Jacobson was one of the first to measure the electrical
activity of the muscles. He believed that anxiety
showed itself through tension in the muscles, and he
believed that if we could reduce the muscular response, then
we would also reduce the amount of stress in our bodies, as
well.
This is a
relatively straightforward relaxation technique and is
widely used today. It requires very little
imagination or even willpower. Practicing this technique
will quiet a racing mind or heart and will help you to focus
better and concentrate better.
This
technique teaches the difference between tension and
relaxation as many have come to associate the tension of
every day life to be entirely normal. Many have forgotten
what it is to truly relax.
This
relaxation approach involves tightening and then relaxing
various muscle groups throughout the body, a little bit at a
time. One group of muscles is worked on and then, slowly,
the next.
It does
work best when you can coordinate inhalation of breath with
the tightening of the muscle phase and then controlled
exhalation with the relaxation phase.
For
example:
-Tighten
your left fist, slowly, inhaling as you
do.
-Hold the
tension now, about 5 seconds, continuing to inhale and focus
on the feelings of tension.
-Really
focus on what the tension feels
like.
-Feel the
burn, the lightness, the tightness and the
restriction.
-Label how
the tension feels in your mind.
-Now just
let go, slowly, and relax, exhaling all of the stale tension
and air.
-Notice
any of the relaxation sensations, label
those.
-Slowly
exhale as you name those sensations of relaxation, utter
relaxation.
Whatever
terms you can think of to label the feeling, and then relax,
slowly, exhaling as you do.
Repeat the
same technique for the right fist.
As you
feel the change and are totally relaxed, move on to the next
muscle group.
Go with
about 15- 30 seconds per contraction/relaxation cycle.
If
relaxation imagery appeals to you during this technique, go
ahead and imagine what you can to the feelings of both
tension and to extreme relaxation.
It is
important to compare and contrast the differences you feel
from tension to relaxation.
Try doing
one entire side of your body and then the
other.
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