Skip main navigation

Military Health System

Hurricane Milton & Hurricane Helene

Emergency procedures are in place in multiple states due to Hurricane Milton & Hurricane Helene. >>Learn More

Finding Your Stress 'Sweet Spot'

Image of A Marine posts security during an exercise on Karan Island, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, April 23, 2020. . A Marine posts security during an exercise on Karan Island, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, April 23, 2020.

Did you know that stress, in the right amounts, can actually be good for you?

Channeling stress in the right amount is an innovative health approach that affects total body wellness. For military service members to perform at their best, it's important to channel stress to improve your mission readiness, and to protect, support, and promote your health in the military community.

For each task, there is a certain "right" amount of energy required from your stress response system — known as your Individual Zone of Optimal Functioning (IZOF), or "sweet spot". With too little energy from your stress response system, you might not be engaged enough — but too much and you might lose focus.

This "right" amount of energy is different for each person and each task. Very different stressors will all activate your stress response system but will each require a different level of energy. Similarly, what allows you to perform at your best will look different from what enables your battle buddy to do the same core task.

Perform at your best and stay in your stress "sweet spot" by using these 3 steps:

  1. Name the stress. Don't just react — reflect and plan.
  2. Embrace the stress. Recognize that you feel stressed and your body is giving you energy to perform.
  3. Channel the stress. Use the energy your body is providing to intentionally improve your performance.

If stress is too high, use relaxation response skills to find your 'stress sweet spot.'

Stress can enhance your performance, health, and ability to learn. But when you're stressed too often, too much, or for too long, it can negatively impact you. Luckily, your body has a relaxation response system, and you can learn a few skills to calm yourself down and focus your energy to maximize performance in stressful situations.

The more you practice these relaxation response skills, the better you'll be able to utilize them when needed and you'll have a better idea of which ones work best for you at different times. Read through some of the skills below, and click the links for more information.

Tactical breathing exercises

Slow your breathing by using steady, full breaths and longer exhales, activating your relaxation response. Regularly practicing tactical breathing can help reduce symptoms associated with anxiety, insomnia, post-traumatic stress disorder, and depression. To learn more, read Human Performance Resources by CHAMP's (HPRC) article on how tactical breathing works.

Progressive muscle relaxation

Progressive muscle relaxation (PMR) is a practice in which you tighten and then relax each muscle group in your body, which helps relieve physical symptoms of stress by lowering blood pressure, lessening fatigue, and easing tense muscles. Listen to HPRC's audio guide for progressive muscle relaxation to learn more.

Mindfulness meditation

Mindfulness meditation is focusing on the present moment rather than thinking about the past or future. It can help increase your memory and ability to focus, lower your perception of stress and anxiety, and improve your health if done regularly. To learn more, listen to HPRC's audio guide to practice a mindfulness meditation.

Yoga

Yoga combines stretching exercises, breathing techniques, and meditation. There are many different types of yoga you can do at home, outdoors, or at a yoga studio. Yoga can help release stress, improve sleep, relieve pain, and improve health. Watch HPRC's video guides to practice yoga to learn more.

Positive emotions

Positive emotions, like gratitude, can lower your heart rate and bring your body back down to baseline when you begin to feel angry or stressed. Read HPRC's tips on how to put more positive emotions in your life and use our Gratitude Calendar.

Positive self-talk

Positive self-talk can help you find your stress sweet spot by replacing negative thoughts with positive ones. Check out HPRC's worksheet on how to optimize your self-talk.

Download the Relaxation Skills worksheet to track your use of these relaxation skills. It can help you learn what works best for you to manage your stress and optimize your performance.

HPRC provides performance optimization and Total Force Fitness resources for the military community. HPRC is the educational arm of the Consortium for Health and Military Performance, a DOD Center of Excellence located at the Uniformed Services University.

You also may be interested in...

Article
May 31, 2023

Confidential Mental Health Resources Available to Military Families

U.S. Marine Corps Pfc. Christian Luna Salvador, right, a postal clerk with Headquarters and Support Battalion, Marine Corps Installations Pacific, speaks to Tarra Brannon, a social worker with Marine Corps Community Services Okinawa, in a family evacuation drill during Exercise Constant Vigilance 2022 on Camp Foster, Okinawa, Japan, on Oct. 20, 2022. The Military Health System offers many services to service members in a variety of settings in times of stress and anxiety. (credit: U.S. Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Thomas Sheng)

“Checking in on your mental health can be as easy as making an appointment with a mental health professional, such as a therapist or psychiatrist – and that can be done face to face or virtually,” said U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Anna Fedotova, mental health flight commander, Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico.

Article
May 26, 2023

Walter Reed Expert Shares Five Ways to Prioritize Mental Health

Dr. Diaz discusses the importance of mental fitness with U.S. Army Pvt. 2 Kaliyah Rowan at the Mental Fitness Information table during Staff Resiliency Week at Walter Reed. Diaz says prioritizing mental health is key to building resilience, and shared five ways staff members can do just that in honor of Mental Health Awareness Month. (Photo by U.S. Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Jesse Sharpe, Walter Reed National Military Medical Center)

In today's fast-paced health care environment, it's more important than ever to prioritize mental health to build resilience, and in honor of National Mental Health Awareness Month and Staff Resiliency Week at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Dr. Kristine Diaz, a personnel psychologist, shares five ways staff members can prioritize their ...

Article
May 24, 2023

5 Tips To Start a Conversation About Getting Mental Health Care

5 Tips To Start a Conversation About Getting Mental Health Care

“How are you?” It’s a question almost everyone answers every day. Like most, your usual response is probably, “Fine, thanks. How are you?” But if you really think about it, are you fine? Maybe you haven’t been yourself in a while. You’re feeling sad, stressed, lonely, or just not how you want to feel. You’d like to start feeling better but aren’t ...

Fact Sheet
May 22, 2023

Changes in Behavior, Personality or Mood Following Concussion/mTBI Fact Sheet

.PDF | 977.73 KB

This TBICoE fact sheet can be used by health care providers to educate patients with a concussion, or mild TBI, on how to manage changes in mood related to their injury. Patients and caregivers would also find this information useful.

Article
May 22, 2023

New Mental Health Care Initiative Improves Access to Care and Readiness

A room plaque for the 341st Operational Medical Readiness Squadron mental health flight is pictured inside the base clinic June 23, 2021, at Malmstrom Air Force Base, Montana. The mental health flight offers mental health services to active duty members and manages the Family Advocacy and Alcohol and Drug Abuse Prevention and Treatment programs. (U.S. Air Force photo by Heather Heiney)

For more than a year, the Air Force Medical Service has been rolling out Mental Health Targeted Care, an initiative that helps Airmen and Guardians understand all of the available options for support and connects them to the right resource either in a mental health clinic or outside the military hospital with another supporting agency that best meets ...

Article
May 17, 2023

Targeted Care Pilot Aims to Match Demand for Mental Health Care

Targeted Care Pilot Aims to Match Demand for Mental Health Care

The DHA Targeted Care Pilot deployed to 10 sites in April 2023. The pilot, lasting six months, aims to alleviate the strained mental health system by matching service members to the care they need—wherever they are on a spectrum of mental health issues. Following the pilot, DHA will review results for the purpose of further refinement, continuation, ...

Video
Apr 27, 2023

A Healthy Mind is a Healthy Body

Video thumbnail

DHA Senior Enlisted Leader Chief Tanya Johnson talks about the importance of defending your mental health. For more information on DHA mental health resources, please visit www.health.mil/mentalhealth

Skip subpage navigation
Refine your search
Last Updated: September 28, 2023
Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Follow us on Facebook Follow us on X Follow us on YouTube Sign up on GovDelivery