stress-relief
Stress Relief
Reclaim calm in minutes, not hours. Quick techniques, stress insights, and recovery tools built right into your workflow.
What it does
- Quick relief: Breathing exercises, progressive muscle relaxation, immediate grounding techniques
- Stress logging: Automatic tracking of stress events with context and intensity
- Pattern recognition: Identify triggers, peak stress times, and recurring stressors
- Recovery tools: Guided decompression, breaks, and boundary-setting prompts
- Trend analysis: Weekly summaries of stress levels and improvement areas
Usage
Quick Relief
Trigger immediate stress-busting techniques when you need it fast.
- 60-second breathing exercise (4-7-8 technique)
- 2-minute progressive muscle relaxation
- 5-minute grounding (5 senses method)
Log Stress
Record stress events as they happen or reflect at the end of your day.
- Intensity level (1-10)
- What triggered it
- Physical symptoms
- Context (work, personal, health, etc)
Identify Triggers
Find patterns in what's causing stress without judgment.
- Most common triggers this week
- Time-of-day patterns
- Situations that escalate stress most
- Recurring vs. one-time stressors
Decompress
Guided recovery after high-stress periods.
- Progressive wind-down sequences
- Boundary-setting reminders
- Post-stress reflection prompts
- Recovery mode activation
Review Patterns
Weekly insights on your stress landscape.
- Stress trend (up/down/stable)
- Top 3 triggers this week
- Improvement areas to focus on
- Recovery success rate
Techniques
Breathing - 4-7-8 technique: Inhale for 4 counts, hold for 7, exhale for 8. Signals your nervous system to calm down.
Progressive Muscle Relaxation - Tense and release muscle groups from toes to head. Takes 2 minutes, breaks the stress cycle physically.
Quick Walks - 5 minutes outside or around your space. Movement + fresh air reset cortisol levels fast.
Brain Dump - Write everything on your mind without filtering. Gets it out of your head and onto a page where you can process it.
Boundaries - Say no to non-essential tasks during high-stress periods. Protect your capacity before it's gone.
Tips
- Start small - One technique is better than none. Master breathing first, add others later.
- Log consistently - Even 30 seconds of note-taking reveals patterns you can't see in real time.
- Use triggers as alerts - If you notice escalating stress, shift to quick relief before it compounds.
- Recovery is active - Don't wait to feel better; use decompression tools to actively lower stress.
- All data stays local on your machine - No cloud syncing, no external servers. Your stress patterns are yours alone.
If You're in Crisis
This skill is not a substitute for professional help.
- 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline)
- Text HOME to 741741 (Crisis Text Line)
If you're in immediate danger, call emergency services (911 in the US).