✓ Accepted Answer
Managing anxiety without medication starts with understanding that anxiety is a physiological response. Your nervous system is activating a threat response. The goal is to calm that response.
Controlled breathing is the fastest tool. The 4-7-8 technique: inhale for 4 seconds, hold for 7, exhale slowly for 8. The extended exhale activates your parasympathetic nervous system — the "rest and digest" state. Do this for 4 cycles when anxious.
Regular exercise is as effective as antidepressants for mild-moderate anxiety according to several studies. Even 30 minutes of brisk walking three times a week produces measurable improvements. Exercise burns off stress hormones and boosts GABA, a natural calming neurotransmitter.
Limit caffeine and alcohol — both worsen anxiety despite feeling like they help in the moment. Caffeine directly stimulates the stress response. Alcohol provides temporary relief but increases anxiety the next day.
If anxiety is significantly affecting your daily life, please do speak to a GP or therapist. CBT is very effective and available online.
by babatundenwosu45082
To sleep better: the most evidence-backed change is keeping a consistent wake-up time every day, including weekends. Your body's circadian rhythm is anchored to your wake time, not your sleep time. Set an alarm for the same time daily for two weeks and don't nap longer than 20 minutes.
Your bedroom should be dark, cool (around 18°C is optimal), and quiet. Use blackout curtains or a sleep mask. Even small amounts of light suppress melatonin. Charge your phone outside the bedroom if possible.
Avoid caffeine after 2pm. Caffeine has a half-life of about 5 hours, so an afternoon coffee still has significant effect at midnight. Alcohol might help you fall asleep but it fragments sleep quality in the second half of the night.
For persistent insomnia, Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) is more effective than sleeping pills long-term. It's available via apps like Sleepio or through your GP.
by nikhilpandey49057
· 4 upvotes
The healthiest diet backed by the most consistent evidence is the Mediterranean diet: abundant vegetables, fruits, legumes, whole grains, nuts, olive oil, fish, and moderate amounts of poultry and dairy. Red meat and processed foods are eaten rarely.
This isn't about tracking macros or counting calories — it's a food pattern. Practically: most of your plate should be vegetables, you cook with olive oil instead of vegetable oil, you eat fish 2-3 times per week, and you snack on nuts instead of crisps.
For weight loss specifically, the evidence suggests that any diet you can actually stick to works. Consistency beats perfection. Some people do better with lower carbohydrate diets, others with lower fat. The key is reducing processed food intake, increasing protein (it keeps you full), and eating more vegetables.
Be sceptical of any diet claiming miraculous results. If it eliminates entire food groups unnecessarily or requires expensive supplements, it's probably not worth doing long-term.
by kwabenaadjei
· 4 upvotes