Your data. Your choice.

If you select «Essential cookies only», we’ll use cookies and similar technologies to collect information about your device and how you use our website. We need this information to allow you to log in securely and use basic functions such as the shopping cart.

By accepting all cookies, you’re allowing us to use this data to show you personalised offers, improve our website, and display targeted adverts on our website and on other websites or apps. Some data may also be shared with third parties and advertising partners as part of this process.

Background information

What helps with stress? Try kissing for longer

Olivia Leimpeters-Leth
30/3/2023
Translation: Megan Cornish

Stress has ensured human survival for thousands of years. These days, it sometimes seems almost easier to escape death than chronic stress. But there are ways out.

Stress is one of the widespread diseases of our time. How could it not be? Everyday life is full of stress triggers, from the first shrill beeps of your alarm clock or mobile phone to the demoralising evening news.

It’s good that there are guides such as «Stress» (in German) by Emily and Amelia Nagoski. They explain what’s behind stress and how to deal with stressful situations more successfully.

Fight or flight: what’s behind the feeling of stress?

Stress: what’s happening in your body?

So, if you’re confronted with a stressor, a cocktail of adrenaline, cortisol and endorphin hormones shoots into your blood and provokes a complex physical reaction: your heart beats faster, your blood pressure rises, your muscles are well supplied with blood and tensed, your senses are sharpened and your perception of pain is dulled.

At the same time, other bodily functions that you don’t need immediately to survive the danger recede into the background: digestion slows down and immune and sexual function changes, as a study in the Excli Journal confirms. Maybe you know the feeling of losing your appetite when stress gets too much.

In today’s times, stressors no longer threaten your life.

But stress is definitely a threat to your health – as soon as it becomes chronic. Authors Emily and Amelia Nagoski sum up this absurdity in their book. They write: «In the modern, post-industrial Western world, stress kills you faster than the stressor.»

Depression and diabetes: the consequences of chronic stress

In the past, eliminating the stressor largely calmed the stress. Stress also often went away if the escape was successful or the attacker was defeated. What about today? You can’t just get up and run away at work or attack your busy colleague. «Fight or flight» is no longer appropriate stress management in the 21st century.

According to the Nagoswkis, we get stuck in the stress cycle because we’re stuck in stressful situations. If this lasts too long, i.e. if we don’t find a way to deal with the stress and a way out of the stressful situation, the consequences can be damaging to our health.

She also explains that chronic stress can lead to a weakened immune system with permanently elevated levels of inflammation. This is associated with conditions such as cancer, diabetes, autoimmune diseases or diseases of the cardiovascular system.

5 exercises for everyday life: how to break out of the stress cycle

You won’t be able to avoid getting into stressful situations again and again, but your stress reaction is often not really appropriate. So, it’s important that you find a way out of the stress reaction so that you can return to a relaxed state. Authors Emily and Amelia Nagoski have identified five powerful ways to successfully manage stress.

1. Sport helps with stress

Exercising is good for the body and mental health. That’s well established. When it comes to stress, physical exercise isn’t just one method; it’s the most effective way to combat stress. 20 to 60 minutes of physical activity a day is enough to lower your stress level for several hours.

2. Take a deep breath

Famously, you can breathe without sport. So, when you’re stressed, it’s advisable to take deep breaths in and out with a pause between breaths. This allows you to downregulate your stress response, reduce the cortisol in your blood and send your body calm, secure signals.

Here’s a simple exercise: inhale while counting to five. Hold your breath and count to five again. Then exhale and count to ten. Repeat the exercise as many times as needed to lower your heart rate and feel the relaxation.

3. Maintain positive social contact

4. The six-second stress-relieving kiss

Relationship researcher John Gottman also recommends the «six-second kiss» as an affection exercise: kiss your partner or a person you like very much for six seconds. You’ll find that your stress levels will drop and you’ll regain a comfortable equilibrium with the world. If needed, you can of course repeat the exercise as often as you want (with the consent of the other person, of course).

5. Creativity

Again, it’s not about avoiding stress entirely. Rather, the healthiest thing is to learn ways out of the stress cycle and how to deal with stress appropriately. Then you not only reduce stress, but also build resilience and resistance to stressful situations.

Header image: Shutterstock

15 people like this article


User Avatar
User Avatar

I'm a sucker for flowery turns of phrase and allegorical language. Clever metaphors are my Kryptonite – even if, sometimes, it's better to just get to the point. Everything I write is edited by my cat, which I reckon is more «pet humanisation» than metaphor. When I'm not at my desk, I enjoy going hiking, taking part in fireside jamming sessions, dragging my exhausted body out to do some sport and hitting the occasional party. 


Background information

Interesting facts about products, behind-the-scenes looks at manufacturers and deep-dives on interesting people.

Show all

These articles might also interest you

  • Background information

    5 reasons why kissing is so good for you

    by Olivia Leimpeters-Leth

  • Background information

    How oatmeal and the "glucose trick" let me down

    by Stefanie Lechthaler

  • Background information

    Power für deine Kraftwerke: Was ist dran an der «Mito-Medizin»?

    by Mareike Steger