With my own life I have been amazed at how much even something as simple as stress levels can affect your physical health, definitely paying attention to that is important. It's also pretty amazing how hairdressers and dentists are often the ones who end up spotting mental health symptoms as a result of specific conditions that happen because of things like stress which has been a major issue for me lately. Things are coming down now so it will probably go away as I get into my comfort zone but I do find it interesting. The teeth grinding went away the second I started noticing it and it eventually stopped in my sleep.
In case anyone is wondering so you know what to look for:
. Teeth grinding
. Alopecia ( Occurs as a bald patch sometimes, goes away apparently once you calm down overall )
I think you're definitely right about the mental health industry, there's also the fact that there's a massive profit incentive with transitioning surgeries. That explains why the trend has been exploding so much lately, then they'll move onto the next insider trading scam once they've milked it dry or gotten enough negative PR.
By the way, with regards to physical manifestations of mental health, seeing the before and after photographs of left wingers before they got leftism is terrifying and sad, especially the Antifa bunch.
Stress is probably one of the biggest causes of people's physical health falling apart. It can age you prematurely, which is a path you can't undo once it happens. You might stop it from completing, but you'll be starting further up once it kicks in naturally.
And ironically, one of the best treatments for stress I've found is to not pay attention to it. Not suppress it, but simply not care about it. A phrase I keep in my pocket a lot is:
Well, that doesn't mean I get to quit regardless.
Because once you train your mind and body to realize that you can push through stress, it stops effecting you as heavily. Its an old technique used on treating phobias, but it applies pretty well to treating basic stressors as well.
With my own life I have been amazed at how much even something as simple as stress levels can affect your physical health, definitely paying attention to that is important. It's also pretty amazing how hairdressers and dentists are often the ones who end up spotting mental health symptoms as a result of specific conditions that happen because of things like stress which has been a major issue for me lately. Things are coming down now so it will probably go away as I get into my comfort zone but I do find it interesting. The teeth grinding went away the second I started noticing it and it eventually stopped in my sleep.
In case anyone is wondering so you know what to look for:
. Teeth grinding
. Alopecia ( Occurs as a bald patch sometimes, goes away apparently once you calm down overall )
I think you're definitely right about the mental health industry, there's also the fact that there's a massive profit incentive with transitioning surgeries. That explains why the trend has been exploding so much lately, then they'll move onto the next insider trading scam once they've milked it dry or gotten enough negative PR.
By the way, with regards to physical manifestations of mental health, seeing the before and after photographs of left wingers before they got leftism is terrifying and sad, especially the Antifa bunch.
Stress is probably one of the biggest causes of people's physical health falling apart. It can age you prematurely, which is a path you can't undo once it happens. You might stop it from completing, but you'll be starting further up once it kicks in naturally.
And ironically, one of the best treatments for stress I've found is to not pay attention to it. Not suppress it, but simply not care about it. A phrase I keep in my pocket a lot is:
Because once you train your mind and body to realize that you can push through stress, it stops effecting you as heavily. Its an old technique used on treating phobias, but it applies pretty well to treating basic stressors as well.