Bread making for stress relief...

Nurses Stress 101

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I learned when I first became a nurse the importance of 1)not bringing work home 2)not taking home to work 3)how very important it is to find ways to decompress and destress on days off. I am not a "social" person by nature, I do not find comfort in crowds of people, in fact the last thing I want to do on my days off is deal with the general public. I have a few close friends that I can have good times with, but often our schedules just don't mesh. Working opposite shifts from most of my friends and even my husband doesn't help much. Trying to juggle work, home, kids, errands all add up, and usually it all adds up to stress! Mix in traffic and lines, bills, etc and there you have more stress.

I used to try to do everything on my days off, setting unreasonable and unattainable goals for every one of them. I have learned to spend my time more wisely now, as I have gotten a bit older. Yoga is my go-to. Reading in a comfy chair with a pot of tea, for hours (hey, the laundry will get done, eventually, I promise, right after I finish this book; 3 hours and 8 chapters later). Chilling in the recliners while watching a movie with my husband. Gardening when the weather is nice. Taking the dog for a walk in the woods. Sitting outside and just listening to the trees talk to each other as the birds sing their little hearts out. and my ultimate autumn/winter destresser? Making homemade bread, the old fashioned way... yes, that means mixing, pouring and kneading it all by hand. Waiting for it to rise, then punching it down again. Frustrated with a patient? mad at management? fed up with co-worker drama? knead that dough, pound it, take all your frustrations out on it, it won't care.... and when you are done, you will feel better, the bread will bake up light and airy.

The best part is taking it out of the oven, tearing off a huge chunk, slathering it with freshly made preserves/butter/apple butter/pumpkin butter, whatever and eating it. In my world, the moment you get the first whiff of bread baking in the oven, all stress dissipates.

I made bread today, what did you do to relieve your stress?

Specializes in Emergency room, Neurosurgery ICU.
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what a beautiful cake! If we were close enough, I'd hire you to do my daughters wedding cakes next October. That looks lovely and I bet it was delicious!

Specializes in Home Health, Palliative Care.
I love to bake too!! Although I do rely on my Kitchen Aid to do the kneading for me, beating my cake batters etc. :) I like to decorate cakes also. Here's one I did for a bridal shower a few years ago; the only thing non-edible is florist wire and the ribbon. The flowers and butterflies are gum paste and gelatin. [ATTACH=CONFIG]16248[/ATTACH]

I used to scrapbook, but I just don't have the time now. Now though I do photo books on Shutterfly for my kids; it's all the fun of scrapbooking in a fraction of the time, with none of the mess. :)

Beautiful

Baking has always been my go-to stress reliever. I used to say, "If you hear me in the kitchen making something at 2am, you'll know that something's wrong. Working with dough is extremely therapeutic. The feel, the smell, and the knowledge that no matter how frantic of a mood you're in, you're not going to be able to rush the process, is a comforting and humbling lesson in patience. Now that I'm in nursing school, I can't seem to find much time to bake much, but I did discover a way to sort of mimic making something without actually having to go whole-hog.

I make pie crust. Occasionally, I make several batches of pie crust. I cut in the lard (yes, lard) and butter by hand, pop chunks into freezer bags, press them flat, and then throw them in the freezer for later use. It tastes infinitely better than store-bought, takes very little time, and still allows me the tactile experience of touching something doughy without requiring hours of my time. When the weather gets cooler, I dig into my stockpile of crust, and all of my sadness and frustrations get turned into apple pies, and chicken pot pies, and comforting, soul-soothing things that can hopefully transport me from the feelings that spurred the pie crust creation in the first place.

I've been so utterly depressed and useless feeling lately that maybe I need to get back to doing this.

Specializes in SICU, trauma, neuro.
what a beautiful cake! If we were close enough, I'd hire you to do my daughters wedding cakes next October. That looks lovely and I bet it was delicious!

Thank you! You made my day!! :)

Specializes in SICU, trauma, neuro.
Beautiful

Thank you!! :)

Specializes in SICU, trauma, neuro.

Hugs!! I'm sorry you've been feeling down.

Baking has always been my go-to stress reliever. I used to say, "If you hear me in the kitchen making something at 2am, you'll know that something's wrong. Working with dough is extremely therapeutic. The feel, the smell, and the knowledge that no matter how frantic of a mood you're in, you're not going to be able to rush the process, is a comforting and humbling lesson in patience. Now that I'm in nursing school, I can't seem to find much time to bake much, but I did discover a way to sort of mimic making something without actually having to go whole-hog.

I make pie crust. Occasionally, I make several batches of pie crust. I cut in the lard (yes, lard) and butter by hand, pop chunks into freezer bags, press them flat, and then throw them in the freezer for later use. It tastes infinitely better than store-bought, takes very little time, and still allows me the tactile experience of touching something doughy without requiring hours of my time. When the weather gets cooler, I dig into my stockpile of crust, and all of my sadness and frustrations get turned into apple pies, and chicken pot pies, and comforting, soul-soothing things that can hopefully transport me from the feelings that spurred the pie crust creation in the first place.

I've been so utterly depressed and useless feeling lately that maybe I need to get back to doing this.

I bake and I knit, and I've found both to be very effective stress relievers. I made two sweaters in a two week time frame right around finals when I was in school. I started night shift this week and I'll be throwing together a few batches of dough before I go in tomorrow. There's nothing like the smell of baking bread. Heals the soul. I also started a lovely cowl for my oldest daughter today....lots of stress knitting in my future :)

Specializes in Emergency room, Neurosurgery ICU.

I have yet to learn now to knit (me Mum is left handed, and I am not, so, she never taught me, said it would be backwards, whatever), but it is on the bucket list, as my daughter managed to learn and says it is much faster than the crocheting I do (not that I can read a crochet pattern, but I do manage to make dish towels and have made each of my 4 kids afghans)

It was nice to hear about how the rest of you relax and destress... and amazing to learn how many of you also enjoy making bread.

Happy Baking!

Since I discovered Pinterest I have tried my hand at bread. More like flat bread.I tried the pretzel thing since it was popular last year. Yeah tasted like boiled heavy bread. So I discovered soap making. I can make soap. The bread is at Walmart.

I tried to make bread too. I was a nursing student in mass and moved to Florida . Trying to get my Lpn but cannot afford cost . Because I can't find a job as a cna . Plz. Could you give me any advice here in Florida . I filed. 85 applications online for pct in Florida hospitals. 5 locations . Gloria

Specializes in Float Pool-Med-Surg, Telemetry, IMCU.

I love to bake and cook also! Right now I've got a pot of vegetarian matzoh ball soup on the stove and a delicious roasted beet salad with fresh mozzarella and homemade dressing as an appetizer. There is nothing that relaxes me like chopping a bunch of vegetables; it's almost like meditation.

I don't make bread very often because I'm trying to cut some carbs but I enjoy the process as well. And I've recently gotten into mushroom foraging; it's so much fun to go into the woods and search for them....and then go home and make something delicious that I can't share with my partner because she hates all mushrooms. (sad.)

Specializes in Emergency room, Neurosurgery ICU.
And I've recently gotten into mushroom foraging; it's so much fun to go into the woods and search for them....and then go home and make something delicious that I can't share with my partner because she hates all mushrooms. (sad.)

Guess that leaves more mushrooms for you! (I love them, by the way!)

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