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Silent corner at home is a stress-buster: Dr. Payal Kanodia
TIWN
Silent corner at home is a stress-buster: Dr. Payal Kanodia
PHOTO : TIWN

Mumbai, Feb 18 (TIWN): Astonishingly, about 82 per cent Indians are stressed out today and nearly 90 per cent people suffer from anxiety. Fifty-five per cent og the employed are also fighting stress and anxiety. Work-life balance has become a synonym for stress buster. While 41 per cent employees planned for time-off, only 30 per cent could take time off, and the reason is not always work-pressure rather a self-created stress. The rising stress levels even made India earn the title of being the most depressed country in the world, for few years.

"Stress needs to be managed. Interestingly, one in three professionals manage stress by self-control, meditation and yoga, taking morning or evening walks, pursuing their favourite hobby like singing or playing instruments or dancing, or scheduling their lifestyle in a systematic manner. I also found that some people cook and become a home chef every Sunday and some go out for dinner to a nice restaurant. I have come across many people who release stress by organizing their wardrobes," says Dr. Payal Kanodia, Trustee - M3M Foundation, a philanthropic arm of M3M India, India's leading real-estate developer.

Most of the people search for a quiet place where they can unwind and introspect themselves and also for logical conclusion of unfinished agenda. This unfinished agenda has also been a leading factor that only increases palpitation, stress and anxiety.

"This is very true. It is important to have a and quiet and silent corner in your home to unwind. This ‘silent corner' at your home is a stress-buster. I too have my silent space in my house where I sit for about 20-30 minutes quietly every day. It is my space where I am me-within-myself. The daily hectic schedules, meetings and commitments can keep anyone mentally as well as physically occupied, and unless one unwinds, it becomes difficult to cope-up with the next day‘s hectic schedules," says Kanodia.

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