Episode Details
Back to Episodes#67 Stress Reduction: What Actually Works—and What’s Just Wellness Hype
Description
Stress is everywhere and so is the marketing. Nearly half of US adults say they feel stressed often, and the wellness world is ready with a supplement, a lab panel, or a pricey device for every symptom. We wanted a cleaner answer: what is stress, what can we measure at home, and what actually reduces stress in a way that’s grounded in real studies rather than hype.
We start by defining stress in a practical way: stress rises when the demands you perceive exceed the resources you think you have. That helps explain why stress can feel so intense even when there’s no single “stress blood test” to prove it. From there, we walk through simple, objective tracking tools you can use right away, led by the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS-10). We also talk about supportive signals like resting heart rate and heart rate variability (HRV), and why cortisol testing often creates more confusion than clarity in day-to-day life.
Then we get into what works. The strongest evidence supports unsexy basics like better sleep and regular exercise, plus approachable mind-body tools like breathwork and mindfulness meditation. We also cover two surprising areas with research behind them: music therapy and aromatherapy (often lavender). Finally, we call out common red flags and popular myths, including “adrenal fatigue,” questionable supplement stacks, and consumer vagus nerve stimulation gadgets that borrow credibility from real implantable medical devices without delivering real proof.
If you want a plan you can trust, we outline an N of 1 stress reduction experiment: measure your baseline, test one change for a week or two, re-measure, and keep only what moves your numbers and your life. Subscribe, share this with a stressed-out friend, and leave a review on Apple or Spotify, then send us a note with what you tried and what actually worked for you.