"A preeminent expert sheds light on how to handle
the daily hassles of life. It's not just a manual for managing stress--it's a
toolkit for preventing it." --Adam Grant, #1 New York Times bestselling
author of Think Again
From world-renowned psychologist and New York
Times-bestselling author Dr. Elissa Epel, a simple yet powerful plan to
turn your stress into your strength in just seven days
We can't avoid stress. But we can embrace it and transform
it.
Whether we're facing deadlines, difficulties with family or
friends, personal crises, or just the uncertainty of the world--stress is the
ocean we swim in. Even our negative thoughts can trigger our body's stress
response so we rarely experience periods of ease and deep restoration.
In The Stress Prescription, Dr. Epel
distills decades of research, infused with wisdom, into a practical yet
transformative seven-day plan of science-based techniques that can help you
harness stress through more positive challenge and purpose.
The seven-day prescription will lead you through these
exercises:
Day 1: Things Will Go Wrong . . . And That's All Right
Day 2: Control What You Can . . . And Put Down the Rest
Day 3: Be the Lion
Day 4: Train for Resilience
Day 5: Let Nature Do the Work
Day 6: Don't Just Relax . . . Restore
Day 7: Start Full, End Full
Dr. Epel shows us how we can "stress better"--by
training our minds and bodies to shift towards a flexible, beneficial stress
response that can actually enhance health. You will develop a more robust
mindset, build the resources you need to turn stress into strength, and fill
your days with more joy, connection, and ease.
About the Author
Elissa Epel, PhD, is a leading health psychologist
who studies stress, aging, and obesity. She is the director of UCSF's Aging,
Metabolism, and Emotion Center and is associate director of its Center for
Health and Community. She is a member of the National Academy of Medicine and
serves on scientific advisory committees for the National Institutes of Health
and the Mind & Life Institute. She has received awards from Stanford
University, the Society of Behavioral Medicine, and the American Psychological
Association. She is the coauthor of the New York Times bestseller The
Telomere Effect.