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Seasonal Mood and Hormonal Changes – Does your menstrual cycle and the seasons affect your mood?

Many women report mood changes linked to their monthly menstrual cycles. Between 3% and 9% of women of reproductive age experience premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), often with severe depression symptoms.

How are these monthly mood changes — mild or severe — affected by seasonal weather and activities? When should you talk to a doctor and seek treatment for depression?

Seasonal Mood Cycles

“When we screen women to get into our studies of PMDD, many of them mention that they generally feel somewhat better in the summer, and worse in the winter,” says Jean Endicott, PhD, professor of clinical psychology in psychiatry at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons. “We’ll sometimes get phone calls in the summer from women saying ‘It’s not so bad now, but will you be taking new patients in November?’”

Endicott doesn’t know of any scientific studies that specifically link severity of cycle-related mood changes to the seasons, but says it makes sense.

“In addition to the effect that light has on mood and depression, there’s the fact that women could be outdoors and exercising more during the summer months, and exercise can help with depressive symptoms linked to the hormonal cycle,” she says.

The link also makes biologic sense, adds Dorothy Sit, MD, assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. “People who have changes in mood related to season may experience this partially due to changes in circadian rhythm,” she explains. “Estrogen and progesterone fluctuations have also been shown to advance and delay circadian rhythms.”

Whether these cyclic changes are enough to bring on or worsen mood changes or PMDD symptoms probably depends on the individual woman, and how sensitive she is to estrogen and progesterone.

Is It PMDD or Depression?

Before you conclude that your mood changes or depression are definitely linked to your menstrual cycle, try keeping a diary for three months, suggests Nada Stotland, MD, MPH, professor of psychiatry and obstetrics and gynecology at Rush Medical College in Chicago.

“Many women who think they have PMS [actually] have symptoms that have nothing to do with their cycles at all,” she says. “We tend to blame everything on that.”

Buy a calendar and chart your daily moods — up, down, happy, sad, tired, euphoric, angry, irritable, or fatigued. But make sure it’s a page-a-day calendar, not a monthly one.

“If you’re looking at a monthly calendar, you anticipate your period and are thinking, ‘That’s when I’m going to feel bad,’” Stotland says. “In order not to prejudice yourself, find a way to keep track of your moods day by day and not pay attention to where you are in your cycle. You can put that together later.”

Do You Need Treatment?

If your diary does indeed reveal that your ups and downs are linked to your cycle, how do you know if you should seek treatment? Consider some of these questions:

  • Are you not just irritable at these times, but having the worst fights ever with your partner or children?
  • Do you find yourself unable to enjoy work or family life at these times?
  • Do you experience major disruptions in your ability to function, your eating habits, or your sleep patterns?
  • Do you have extreme levels of anxiety and self-criticism?
  • Do you have morbid thoughts about death, dying, or wanting to die?

If you answer yes to several of these questions (especially the last one), call your doctor. “If your cyclic symptoms really start to impair your work or personal life significantly, it’s time to seek professional help,” says Sit.

Treating PMDD

There are several options for treating PMDD, from cognitive behavioral therapy and light box therapy to medications such as antidepressants, anxiety medicine, birth control pills, or other hormone treatments.

Antidepressants
Some women are given antidepressants called SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) to take just before they start menstruating. Typically treatment is started on cycle day 14 and stopped when menstrual bleeding starts. Generally, it takes several weeks for these antidepressants to have an effect, but for women suffering depression linked to menstrual cycles, the medicine seems to work more quickly.

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Cognitive behavioral therapy can help you develop skills to manage depression and mood changes linked to your menstrual cycle, says Catherine Monk, Herbert Irving Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychology in the departments of psychiatry and obstetrics at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons.

“You can learn to have resources in place for when you go into your vulnerable period,” she explains. That may mean knowing not to schedule tough work deadlines during those days, or making sure to plan for a massage or not to miss your yoga class.

“Ahead of time, you should write a list of things that you really enjoy and that allow you to move outside yourself,” says Monk. “This may include books and DVDs that keep you from ruminating, or activities that energize you, like running or painting. Make the list ahead of time, because if you don’t, you won’t have the energy to do it when you’re feeling down. Then commit yourself to trying them even if you don’t want to.”

Light Box Therapy

Studies have also found that light box therapy — a specific treatment that mimics outdoor light and causes biochemical changes in the brain that improve your mood — may be effective for women with PMDD. It may be that light therapy improves melatonin levels, which have been found to be abnormal in women with PMDD.

Whatever treatment may work for you, it’s important not to dismiss your symptoms as “just PMS.”

“If we’re in a situation where we’re fortunate, we tend to think we couldn’t possibly be depressed and have no right to be,” says Stotland. “Or if our circumstances are lousy, we say, ‘No wonder I feel bad.’ But if you’re out in the cold and you get frostbite, you don’t say, ‘No wonder I have frostbite’ — you treat it. If you’re depressed, it’s important to do the same thing.”

Our Stress Relief Tips Will Help You Combat That Burned Out, Weighed Down Feeling

Feeling like the world is on your shoulders? Hopefully our stress relief tips will help ease your burden. This is a face paced multi-tasking world we live in and it’e easy to get overwhelmed. There is so much pressure to get ahead that many times we lose sight of ourselves.

Stress Relief Tips 1) Take Time Out For Yourself – Yes, this is easier said than done but if you don’t slow down sometime you will eventually just collapse. It’s very important that you take at least 30 minutes each day to decompress from all of life’s daily chores. Reserve some time for yourself and you will see that you will fell refreshed and more creative. How can this be done? Well to borrow a phrase from Nike “Just Do It!” It’s that simple.

2) Have A Realistic Plan For The Future – When you have a plan for your future many times you become a prophet. With good plan in place you will reduce your stress by knowing that you are working toward something. Whether it is financial, emotional, spiritual, educational, etc. have a REALISTIC plan. Of course, all plans won’t work, but at least having a plan prevents you from having that dust in the wind feeling. If you fail to plan, plan to fail. When you feel like you are failing your stress level will go through the roof.

3) Have A Good Support Group – Many of us try to be superhuman and try to help everyone. We wind up stressing so much on problems of other that we forget ourselves. Even worse you may become an “dumping ground” for people who don’t want to take responsibility for their lives. Every time they have a problem they lay in on you and expect you to bail them out. Sometimes you just have to say NO, even if it is your child. Having some responsible, caring people around you will go a long way to lower your stress.

4) Get Some Exercise – This is one of our key stress relief tips. Most of the time when you are stressed out you will tend to gain weight. This leads to you feeling bad about yourself which leads to more stress. Plus the extra weight could lead to chronic diseases like high blood pressure and organ corroding diabetes. The end result, SUPER high stress because you will be constantly worrying about your health.

Exercising will help you lose weigh, make you look and feel better, plus the activity releases feel good chemicals (endorphins)which helps lower stress. In general, if you look and feel good, you will be in a more positive frame of mind.

5) Don’t Expect Perfection – No one is perfect and expecting to be perfect only sets you up to feel stressed when you fail to reach perfection. This doesn’t mean you shouldn’t set high standards for yourself, just don’t set impossible ones.

Stress Relief Tips 6) Don’t Worship Money – We all need money but we will not all be rich. Your goal should be to make a decent living and be a productive citizen but when you become consumed about persuing money you will constantly be stressed. In tough economic times it’s easy to get down and depressed, especially when money is tight. We should all remember that most important things in life are love, health and family.

I’m sure you have heard stories about mega rich people killing themselves. In fact, a billionaire victim of Bernard Madoff’s 65 BILLION dollar Ponzi scheme threw himself in front of an oncoming train. Why?! because he was only worth half of what he used to be and he couldn’t live with that. Obviously, he didn’t value his life and maybe was lacking in the family department.

This is one of the key stress relief tips that you should follow because if you start worshipping money you will have a VERY BIG problem.

7) Listen To Soft Music – It has been scientifically been proven that listening to soft music (classical, smooth jazz, etc.) reduces stress by relaxing the mind.

8) Practice Deep Breathing – Deep breathing at 10 breath per minute can lower your stress and your blood pressure. It takes practice to get down to 10 BPM, but it can be down. Sit in dark room with your eyes closed and focus only on your breathing. Breath in through the nose and out through the mouth, take your focus away from all your stresses. // // 9) Call It A Day At A Reasonable Hour – Everyday we are all busy multi-taking and many times we suffer from sleep depravation. Set a time limit when you will cease working and the get some family time or just take it easy. Put down the “Crackberry”, turn off the computer, don’t take work related phone calls. This is your time to do you. Resting will only make you more productive. Remember even God had to rest one day!

10) Show Some Love Give Or Get A Hug – That’s right don’t be a grouch this is one of those good stress relief tips that often goes overlooked. Go on now, give your spouse, kids, friends a big hug. Studies have shown that when you a touched by a loved one stress relieving endorphins are produced. Hugs are free so give one today.

11) Laugh Out Loud – Life may throw you some curves but it’s not all bad. Learn to find the humor in situations Once again lauging produces endorphins, which we know make us feel good. So go to a comedy club, tell some dry jokes, pop in your favorite comedy DVD. Whatever you do just LOL! It really will do you some good.

12) Write A Journal – Use this journal to chronicle your highs and lows. When you are feeling down you can go back and reminisce. You can also use the journal to “unload” any negativity. If you had a bad day write it down then close the book on it…literally.

13) Make Love Not War – Making love with your significant other helps relieve stress by… you guessed it producing endorphins. What’s better than making sweet love after a hard day? This is one of our favorite stress relief tips. ;-)

14) Get Out Into Nature – There’s nothing more refresing that taking a leisurely stroll on the beach or breathing some fresh mountain air. If you live in the city it’s good to get away from the hustle and bustle every so often. Nature generally has a calming effect on the psyche (of course that’s if you don’t get attacked by a mountain lion while hiking in the mountains…LOL). Get more in tune with nature and you will notice your stress level decreasing.

Well folks we hope you find our stress relief tips helpful and when we have more tips we will update the site so be sure to subscribe to our RSS feed. Take care and stress less!

Human Body Facts

  • The average human brain has about 100 billion nerve cells.
  • Nerve impulses to and from the brain travel as fast as 170 miles (274 km) per hour.
  • The thyroid cartilage is more commonly known as the adams apple.
  • The only jointless bone in your body is the hyoid bone in your throat
  • It’s impossible to sneeze with your eyes open.
  • Your stomach needs to produce a new layer of mucus every two weeks or it would digest itself.
  • It takes the interaction of 72 different muscles to produce human speech.
  • The average life of a taste bud is 10 days.
  • The average cough comes out of your mouth at 60 miles (96.5 km) per hour.
  • Relative to size, the strongest muscle in the body is the tongue.
  • Human thigh bones are stronger than concrete.
  • When you sneeze, all your bodily functions stop even your heart.
  • Babies are born without knee caps. They don’t appear until the child reaches 2-6 years of age.
  • Children grow faster in the springtime.
  • It takes the stomach an hour to break down cow milk.
  • Women blink nearly twice as much as men.
  • Blondes have more hair than dark-haired people do.
  • There are 10 human body parts that are only 3 letters long (eye hip arm leg ear toe jaw rib lip gum).
  • If you go blind in one eye you only lose about one fifth of your vision but all your sense of depth.
  • The average human head weighs about 8 pounds.
  • Our eyes are always the same size from birth, but our nose and ears never stop growing.
  • In the average lifetime, a person will walk the equivalent of 5 times around the equator.
  • An average human scalp has 100,000 hairs.
  • The length of the finger dictates how fast the fingernail grows. Therefore, the nail on your middle finger grows the fastest, and on average, your toenails grow twice as slow as your fingernails.
  • The average human blinks their eyes 6,205,000 times each year.
  • The entire length of all the eyelashes shed by a human in their life is over 98 feet (30 m).
  • Your skull is made up of 29 different bones.
  • Your ears and nose continue to grow throughout your entire life.
  • After you die, your body starts to dry out creating the illusion that your hair and nails are still growing after death.
  • Hair is made from the same substance as fingernails.
  • The average surface of the human intestine is 656 square feet (200 m).
  • A healthy adult can draw in about 200 to 300 cubic inches (3.3 to 4.9 liters) of air at a single breath, but at rest only about 5% of this volume is used.
  • The surface of the human skin is 6.5 square feet (2m).
  • 15 million blood cells are destroyed in the human body every second.

  • The pancreas produces Insulin.
  • The most sensitive cluster of nerves is at the base of the spine.
  • The human body is comprised of 80% water.
  • The average human will shed 40 pounds of skin in a lifetime.
  • Every year about 98% of the atoms in your body are replaced.
  • The human heart creates enough pressure to squirt blood 30 feet (9 m).
  • You were born with 300 bones. When you get to be an adult, you have 206.
  • Human thighbones are stronger than concrete.
  • Every human spent about half an hour as a single cell.
  • There are 45 miles (72 km) of nerves in the skin of a human being.
  • The average human heart will beat 3,000 million times in its lifetime and pump 48 million gallons of blood.
  • Each square inch (2.5 cm) of human skin consists of 20 feet (6 m) of blood vessels.
  • During a 24-hour period, the average human will breathe 23,040 times.
  • Human blood travels 60,000 miles (96,540 km) per day on its journey through the body.
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