How Exercise Can Boost Your Mental Health
PSYCHOLOGY TODAY, Mariana Plata
October 10, 2018

The mind and body connection is real, and the research that backs up the relationship between exercise and mental health is extensive. A study published in the journal Maturitas found that “exercise improves anxiety, stress, and depression, it improves physiological and immunological functions.” Another studypublished in the Journal of Health Psychology  “shed further light on the importance of remaining physically active in times of stress.” Its findings suggest that stress decreases significantly when we remain physically active. In that same journal, a study presented earlier this year found that mental contrasting can be a big factor to help maintain these efforts to stay physically active.

Staying physically healthy – understanding that there might be certain medical illnesses that can prevent us from fully embracing this – can boost our spirits and our mood. Not only because there’s a sense of accomplishment that invades us when we’ve worked out, but also due to the release of powerful neurochemicals. Endorphins, serotonin, and norepinephrine – all of which help towards boosting a more positive mood (happiness) and reducing anxiety and stress. And now we have a visual way of seeing this effect.

Zumba, the world-renowned dance program, created the “Before and After Project, a photojournalism series that illustrates the positive effects of exercise on mental health, overall wellness and an increase in feelings of happiness” as a way to raise awareness about the World Mental Health Day (Oct. 10). In it, New York based photographer Raven B. Varona captured how Zumba participants felt before and after their dancing session. The objective of this photojournalism series is to steer away from the traditional weight-loss objective of exercise and to “depict how one feels rather than looks.”

“Before and After” Series

“When I saw Zumba for the first time, the thing that struck me the most was that everybody was smiling,” says Zumba CEO Alberto Perlman. “Happiness seemed to be the objective of the workout, with fitness as the result. Years later, I started hearing how Zumba was turning lives around and helping people get through hard times, or mental illnesses including anxiety, postpartum depression, and PTSD. It’s truly unbelievable the way we are seeing the Zumba movement positively impact people in our communities.”

“After dedicating much of my research over the last decade to the science of happiness and resilience, I was not surprised to learn of the positive impact of Zumba on mental health,” says happiness expert and positive psychology researcher Michelle Gielan. “It’s an excellent workout to fuel happiness as it combines exercise, social support, and a positive environment, unlike other workouts and group exercise regimens that often lack one or more of these key elements.”

It is through these initiatives that we are able to make the mental health conversation more approachable and open for everyone. Whether it’s Zumba, dancing, running, or whatever physical exercise that rocks your boat. Embrace physical activity life and positive mental health consequences will follow.

Originally published at PsychologyToday.com

Photo by Danielle Cerullo on Unsplash