Writing may help your heart cope with divorce-related stress

Writing may help your heart cope with divorce-related stress
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For people going through a divorce, ‘narrative expressive writing’ can help reduce the harmful effects of stress on the heart.

For people going through a divorce, ‘narrative expressive writing’ can help reduce the harmful effects of stress on the heart. "The results suggest that the ability to create a structured narrative not just re-experiencing emotions but making meaning out of them allows people to process their feelings in a more adaptive way, which may in turn help improve their cardiovascular health," said one of the researchers Kyle Bourassa from University of Arizona, Tucson, US.

The study included 109 adults (70 women and 39 men) with a recent marital separation. Participants were randomly assigned to one of three writing exercises, performed on three occasions over several days.

One group performed a traditional expressive writing task, with instructions to write freely about their ‘strongest and deepest emotions’. Another group performed a narrative expressive writing task, in which they created a ‘coherent and organised narrative’ of their separation experience. The third group was given an emotionally neutral writing task.

Indicators of the body's cardiovascular responses to stress were compared before and after the writing tasks up to nine months after the writing. Participants assigned to narrative expressive writing had a reduction in heart rate as well as an increase in heart rate variability (HRV), which measures beat-to-beat variations in heart rate.

Higher HRV reflects better functioning of the body's parasympathetic nervous system reactions to stimuli, including stress. The researchers, however, noted that creating narrative may be good for the heart, but this does not mean that there would be a corresponding improvement in psychological wellbeing.

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