Reducing Stress with Rheumatoid Arthritis is a post from: Rheumatoid Arthritis Warrior For RA or any chronic illness, here are 10 ways reduce stress with rheumatoid arthritis. Reducing stress won't cure the disease but you'll feel better. Reducing Stress...
Reducing Stress with Rheumatoid Arthritis is a post from: Rheumatoid Arthritis Warrior
Reducing stress with RA is important
Living with rheumatoid disease is tough. Almost always, it “progresses,” which means gets worse. Meanwhile it tends to make almost everything harder to do—even things we love to do! Like the old saying goes, it’s “not for the faint of heart.”
Warriors like us don’t just live with this disease—we fight it. This fighting to get as much out of life as possible and the symptoms of the disease itself make stress and rheumatoid arthritis a common need to address. Recently, Healthgrades asked me to write about 10 ways to reduce stress with rheumatoid arthritis. I know these steps will be helpful to you or someone you love who lives with a chronic illness.
10 Ways to Reduce Stress with Rheumatoid Arthritis
Living with a painful chronic disease can lead to increased stress. In particular, stress and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) go hand in hand because RA is a progressive disease that can affect—and damage—almost any part of the body. RA can make performing daily tasks more difficult and create valid reasons to worry about your health.
It’s easy to see how living with RA increases stress: RA often means a lifetime of facing unexpected challenges, increased medical costs, and people who don’t understand—while at the same time managing difficult painful symptoms. Reducing stress with RA seems like a daunting task. And yet it’s especially necessary because stress increases pain and drains mental strength.
Key tips for reducing stress with RA
There’s no magic solution, but these straightforward steps can help reduce stress with RA.
1. Get real. Realistic expectations are your friend. Failing to meet expectations is stressful, especially when they’re your own. It’s hard to change what you expect of yourself, but adjusting expectations is not letting the disease win! It took me years to revise what I expected myself to do each day when I wake up in the morning, but I’m happier now.
Click here to read the entire article on Healthgrades.
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