How have the last few months been for you? Regardless of the positives in your life, if you are anything like me, you’re probably baseline stressed. It’s normal to feel anxious, stressed, and overwhelmed. Colorado is experiencing both a pandemic and a civil rights movement alongside the compounding challenges of onine vs in person schools, a high unemployment rate. At least the wildfires have calmed down, only to be replaced by the political tension. It’s fair to say that I am carrying more stress on a consistent basis, but have you ever thought what it does to the body? We’ve all had that moment where we get some bad news and we can feel the stress take over our bodies. This is called fight, flight or freeze and it’s where your body moves into protection mode. Initially, your heart may pump faster as adrenaline moves through the body, your breathing becomes shallow, and your pupils dilate enhancing your ability to see danger. Your body is preparing for a physical threat even if the stress is from a non-physical threat like a difficult project at work or a spat with a friend. You may experience mild stress, or you may experience high stress. The eyes also experience a range of impact due to stress from mild discomfort to debilitating vision loss. It’s more likely that your eye’s response to stress will be minor, but if any of these symptoms are impacting your quality of life or the symptoms persist give us a call and let us check it out. We know that stress impacts every system of the body including our eyes. Know that the benefits of managing stress on a daily basis will not only improve your eye health, but your overall health. Even picking one stress reducing activity daily can help.Symptoms of Stress Impacting Eye Health:
Ideas to Lower Stress & Relax Your Eyes