Managing Stress in Public Safety
Category: Public Safety
Gordon Graham here with Today’s Tip from Lexipol. And Today’s Tip is for all of my friends in public safety.
Take control of your stressors and pare them down. After all, your family is depending on you to have a long, healthy life well into retirement!
Your chosen profession can be amazingly rewarding. Simultaneously, it can also be amazingly stressful. We all deal with stress in different ways. When you encounter incidents that trigger your stress, what do you do?
I have some suggestions to combat stress. First, take a couple of deep breaths between calls. Stretch out your back and shoulders. Let go of that last call before you head to the next one. It doesn’t help to compound your stress.
Lean on your family and close friends. Don’t block them out. It’s important to share if you had a terrible day. Accept hugs and comfort. Don’t keep the misery bottled up inside. While you don’t need to give your spouse, partner or others the upsetting details of what you saw on your shift, talking does help relieve stress and it releases pressure.
Exercise regularly. Exercise reduces the stress hormones adrenaline and cortisol.
Eat right and avoid heavy meals while on-duty. Try taking a small ice chest with healthy snacks to work.
Here’s a big one: Drink plenty of water and avoid too much soda or other caffeinated drinks like coffee. And only drink alcohol in moderation. Caffeine and alcohol can both interfere with your sleep.
Speaking of sleep, please don’t skimp on it. We all handle stress and the rigors of the job better when we’re well rested.
Lastly, let some stressors go. If shiftwork means that your yard looks a little scruffy, pay a teenager to mow it for you. If coaching your daughter’s softball team is adding to your stress, skip a season and cheer from the bleachers. Take control of your stressors and pare them down. After all, your family is depending on you to have a long, healthy life well into retirement!
And that’s Today’s Tip from Lexipol. Gordon Graham signing off.