How to Create a Care Plan for Yourself

Health empowerment is a big part of the naturopathic approach to healing. Putting healing power and health education into the hands of our clients at Richmond Natural Medicine is foundational to our approach, and we always encourage our clients to educate themselves and trust their intuition when it comes to their own health. We find that one of the biggest barriers to healing with our clients is their lack of confidence in their own innate ability to support themselves, and a feeling of disconnection from their own body. This can be due to a lengthy and complicated health journey with unclear answers, an overwhelming amount of available health information, or living a lifestyle that does not allow time or support for their own health needs.

Below are some tools that our practitioners encourage their clients to utilize to begin making a care plan for themselves. A health plan can include everything you feel is affecting your health – including physical health, mental health, spiritual health, and emotional health. Nothing is too big or small to address in your own care plan, and creating a care plan for yourself is an excellent way to observe how your health and wellbeing is changing over the course of the seasons.

Read more: Daily Practices to Support Mental Health

  1. Make a habit of checking in with yourself, every day. It’s easy to get swept away with our day as soon as we get out of bed, and neglect to notice what we need to feel our best that day. Check in first thing in the morning with yourself – How are you feeling? Is there an area of your body that is drawing your attention? Is there a part of your upcoming day that is causing you stress? What are two words that could describe your emotional state this morning?
  2. Write down how you’re feeling to notice patterns. If time permits, quickly journal these thoughts to make them a bit more clear. This is an excellent tool to check back on if you’re finding you have repeated health patterns.
  3. Prioritize your needs. If you notice that you feel overwhelmed with the amount of things you’d like to improve with your health, start with the easiest to implement first and the most difficult last. For example, an easy health improvement may be to commit to eating one more piece of fruit every day, practicing meditation for 5 minutes in the evening, or spending 10 minutes outside each afternoon. More challenging health improvements may be implementing meal prepping each week or exercising for 30 minutes 5 days per week.
  4. Start with one practice every month. Add one more each month for consistency and accountability. Don’t overwhelm yourself with trying to make all of your health changes at once. It takes weeks to form a new habit and the goal of wellness is to make it personal and sustainable for you and your lifestyle.
  5. Be honest and ask yourself, “What’s getting in my way? Why am I not doing this?” Have you tried making some of these health changes in the past and were unsuccessful? Have you yet to begin? Be honest with yourself and notice what was standing in your way to begin or continue. Some things may be within your control, and some may not. Pay attention to when these barriers show up again, and try a different approach.
  6. Ask for help, and seek out those who can support you in reaching your goals. Much of our health may seem out of our scope, and we need a professional to support us in solving our health needs. The doctors at Richmond Natural Medicine are tuned into looking at your entire health picture, and providing support to connect the dots of your wellness needs. For more information or to schedule an appointment, click here.

 

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Managing Stress While Working From Home

Working from home may once have been idealized as the preferred comfortable and relaxing alternative to the traditional “going to work” office setting. Surrounded by the comforts of home with the daily commute no longer robbing us of precious morning and evening time, working from home is now something so many of us were thrown into unexpectedly this year, for better or for worse. And for many, that ideal home-office bubble quickly burst from the reality of the stressors that build up working in a home that also includes the stressors of not only work, but family responsibilities as well.

5 Herbs to Support Your Stress Response & Nervous System

Many people today are finding themselves juggling the demands of a full time job, child care, home schooling, and the perpetual presence of their partners. Working from home in fact, can be riddled with underlying unexpected stressors, and some may find themselves feeling overwhelmed at how to manage the stress of working from home. Here are a few tips to help with managing stress when working from home:

Simple Ways to Manage Stress at Home

  • Set and communicate clear boundaries to those around you. Do you need something that you’re not asking for, but expecting others to accommodate? Take note of something that may be stressing you that you could help yourself to solve by asking for what you need from those around you, or setting clear boundaries of your own needs or space.

 

  • Take a short break every hour to move your body. Walking, doing a gentle yoga flow, or a few squats every hour stimulates the circulation and supports blood flow to your brain and extremities. When we are stagnant, we can more easily feel tired, and when we are tired we are more quick to anger or be short with those around us. Set a timer to spend 5 minutes each hour moving your body to invigorate your senses. You can even use a yoga ball as a chair to help you keep more mobile and agile during the working hours.

 

  • Maintain a solid evening routine to support optimal sleep. Set a time each and every day to “leave the office”. Although we’re working from home, we need a clear ending to our work day that does not follow us into our sleeping space. Try to go to bed around the same time each night, reading something non-stressful or doing an evening meditation before bed. Devote at least 8 hours to sleep whenever possible. Stay away from screens by 1-2 hours prior to bedtime.

 

  • Incorporate small mindful practices when you notice stress arise. Stress creeps up on us and takes us entirely by surprise sometimes. We can often find ourselves completely overwhelmed with stress before we even know where it came from. Notice those first signs of stress creeping in – a rapid heartbeat, an agitated state of mind, a sense of fear, snapping at those around you, a familiar feeling of frustration at literally everything. Stop immediately when you notice these feelings, then ascertain why these feelings are happening. What is the cause of stress here, and is it something you can control? What simple, clear steps can you take to reduce the stress you feel in your body?

 

Using Mindfulness to Reduce Stress

Taking Inventory of the Stressors In Your Daily Life

If you’re feeling overwhelmed each day with stress that you cannot control, it’s important to pause and allow yourself time to really feel where that stress emotion is coming from. It can be helpful to actually make a list of stressful things that you feel. Nothing is too big or too small. Once you see all of your daily stressors listed out, sort these into things you can control, and things you cannot control. Choose one stressor from your control list, and mindfully work on responding to that stressor differently – more mindfully – that week. Then focus on one stressor from the uncontrollable list and work on finding a comfortable middle ground with this.

For example, a stressor we can all control is how we respond to our children who interrupt us when we’re working. A stressor we may feel is out of our control is a global pandemic.

We cannot respond perfectly to every situation every day, but we can bring mindfulness to our responses and our own behaviors to function as best as we can given our collective situation. Spend time in nature. Move your body daily. Commit to good quality sleep. Take time for joyful things. Fill yourself with good things emotionally and spiritually. And of course feed yourself well. These are all ways we can nourish our bodies and our minds in our own homes.

The Vagus Nerve: What Is It & How Do We Heal It?

Do you need support managing stress while working from home? Consider making an appointment with one of the naturopathic doctors at Richmond Natural Medicine for personalized recommendations to meet your needs.

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