A Good Reason to Look on the Bright Side
We all feel bad sometimes. But there’s one very vocal objector: your heart.
People who often get swallowed up by these and other negative moods may have a higher risk of heart disease — even if they’re otherwise healthy. But you can turn any mood around with a few simple steps.
Social Stress, Troubled Ticker
Social anxiety may have the greatest impact on heart health. In a study of healthy older men, those who scored highest on a negative-emotion scale — especially on social anxiety measures — had the greatest incidence of heart disease 3 years later.
Build Yourself Up
If stress and anxiety have taken hold of you and won’t let go, something really structured like cognitive-behavioral therapy — alone or coupled with medication — may help improve your sense of control and boost your confidence. Here are a couple more feel-good or feel-calm techniques:
Controlled breathing
Muscle relaxation
stress and anxiety, cognitive-behavioral therapy
stress and anxiety, cognitive-behavioral therapy

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