7 Secrets to Stop Feeling Tired All the Time

Calm Your Inner self With peace

Ali Dgr
ILLUMINATION
7 min readJun 27, 2024

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Photo by Sander Sammy on Unsplash

In this modern world, it’s common for people to feel tired or even fatigued. Sometimes you may constantly feel like moving from one task to another without giving yourself time to relax.

Because don’t allow yourself to unwind, find balance, and calm your inner self. In this article, I tell you 7 tips to stop being tired all the time in your daily life.

1. Ditch Your Seat.

In the last decade, daily fatigue has become an increasingly common problem for people worldwide. 15% of women say they feel noticeably tired daily while over 10% of men fall into the same category.

Now, that means in the U.S. alone, tens of millions of people are exhausted all the time. So, what’s the problem? why are so many people struggling to keep their energy levels up?

Well, one answer is hiding behind something you do for hours every day. You do it at work, you do it at home, you even do it when you’re out with friends.

If you haven’t already guessed, I’m talking about sitting. The average American sits for over six and a half hours of their eight-hour workday, and it doesn’t stop there.

When you get home, you lie down for another couple of hours watching T.V., or you sit back on the couch while you’re reading a book without realizing it, you’re spending eight to twelve hours a day sitting on your backside.

Now all that sitting is having a major effect on your energy levels. When you sit for long periods your body slows down and you start feeling lazy. So if you want to stop feeling tired all the time then you need to stand up and get your body moving.

A 2013 study found that short bursts of activity are one of the most effective ways to stimulate your body and your brain.

Whenever possible, try to squeeze in fifteen to twenty minutes of exercise. I know it doesn’t sound like much, but that little burst of activity can give you hours of energy.

2. Cut Your Daily Coffee

Around 90% of people in the U.S. consume some sort of caffeine on a daily basis. Drinks like coffee, tea, and soda pump your body full of milligrams of caffeine, giving you a much-needed burst of energy for a few hours.

Your nervous system goes into overdrive, your heart beats faster, more blood rushes into your brain and muscles, and feel-good hormones like serotonin and dopamine improve your mood concentration and productivity.

So, it’s no surprise that so many people rely on caffeine to make it through the day. When you’re feeling tired or unmotivated, you might turn to coffee or an energy drink to pick you back up, and it probably will.

But that sudden burst of energy might be hurting you in the long run. Most people only pay attention to the short-term benefits of caffeine. They experience an increase in focus and productivity, and they get hooked.

But over time, caffeine can have a major impact on your natural energy levels. Just think about it: if you’re constantly relying on coffee to give you energy, won’t your body have a harder time feeling energetic on its own? That’s not all. Caffeine consumption also worsens the quality of your sleep at night; caffeine makes it harder for your body to relax and gradually wind down.

One study found that caffeinated drinks actually delay your biological clock. You’ll naturally start falling asleep later, and it’ll take even longer for you to fall into a deep sleep.

Remember that your body uses deep sleep to encode new memories, detoxify, and get ready for the next day. So, by drinking too much caffeine, you’re preventing your brain from functioning at its best.

So, if you want to stop feeling tired all the time, just decrease the amount of caffeine that you drink each day. You don’t have to immediately cut all caffeine out of your life.

That’ll just make you feel miserable and even more unproductive. But you should gradually lessen your caffeine intake. Just try ordering smaller cups of coffee or drinking one less soda each day.

Little by little, you’ll feel more energetic than ever, and it won’t be because of the coffee.

3. Pinpoint Your Stress Patterns

Fatigue doesn’t always come from something you did wrong. There are tons of other reasons why you can’t shake that stress and negativity. But it isn’t always easy to figure out what exactly is stressing you out.

That’s why some people use a stress Journal to pinpoint the stressors in their lives. A stress journal is a place for you to write down everything that stresses you out each day.

Are you worried about a presentation at work? Are you anxious about your relatives coming to visit? It’s important to consistently keep track of every stressor because your journal will help you identify the patterns of stress.

Let’s say you’re hanging out with a toxic friend of yours when, after just a few hours, you’re left feeling frustrated. So you go to write it down in your stress journal, but when you look back at the last few times that you hung out with that friend.

You realize something, and they’re constantly adding more stress to your life. When you see that kind of negative pattern, then you know that it’s time to make a change.

It might be hard at first, but over time, you’ll notice a huge difference in your stress and overall positivity.

4. Eat More Iron

If you’re feeling tired all the time, then you may want to take a closer look at the stuff you’re putting into your body. Many people struggle with

fatigue because they aren’t eating enough iron.

Iron is something you’ll find in foods like beans, whole grains, nuts, and leafy greens, and our bodies can’t function without it.

We need iron to create a red protein called haemoglobin, which gives your blood its trademark red colour, but that’s not the reason haemoglobin is so important.

This protein transports oxygen to every nook and cranny of your body, so without the right amount of haemoglobin, your organs and muscles just can’t do their jobs.

Your muscles will feel weak, your brain will feel foggy, and even your lungs will feel weaker when so many things are going wrong in your body that you can’t help but feel tired and sick.

But the good news is that getting rid of your fatigue may be as simple as eating a few more vegetables each day. That extra serving of iron could be the difference between laziness and productivity.

5 Excites Your Mind

Are you feeling trapped or bored at work? Have you lost touch with your favourite hobbies? Sometimes, fatigue means you’re just not feeling inspired when you’re constantly doing things that you don’t like. Well, it drains your energy.

It makes it ten times harder to dedicate yourself to your work. The simple truth is you can’t force yourself to feel passionate. If you’re stuck in a field that you hate, you wake up every morning dreading going to work.

Well, it doesn’t matter if you incorporate every healthy habit into this list. That frustration is going to SAP your enthusiasm, and that’s why you should look for opportunities to get excited.

It doesn’t matter if it’s a new

project at work or a hobby that you’re trying on the side. Just make sure you feel challenged and inspired as often as possible.

6. Shrink Your Meals

Most of us have eaten three meals a day for our entire lives: one in the morning, one in the early afternoon, and one in the evening. But these three meals may be weighing you down more than you think.

The vast majority of people are hungry more than three times a day. We’re hungry the first thing in the morning, so we eat breakfast. But what happens when you get hungry a couple of hours later?

You still have three more hours until lunch, so you force yourself to wait. But by the time lunch rolls around, you’re not just hungry anymore. You’re starving.

So you eat way more than you need to now, and normally, you should feel energetic after a meal. But instead, you feel even more tired and sluggish than you did before.

Chances are you just want to take a nap and sleep off that giant meal. That’s why you should replace your three large meals with six or seven small ones when you’re feeling hungry.

Don’t make yourself wait. Eat something small and give yourself a little burst of energy without feeling the need to overdo it.

That way, you can reap the benefits of a well-portioned meal instead of eating yourself into a food coma.

7. Think about Your Breathing

How often do you stop and think about the way you breathe? Probably not very often many of us go days or weeks without thinking about our breath which is pretty strange.

If you ask me breathing literally keeps you alive yet it fades so easily into the background like blinking your eyes or pumping your heart.

So how does paying attention to your breath keep you away from feeling tired? Believe it or not, a few minutes of careful breathing will leave you feeling clear-headed and re-energized.

All you have to do is sit up straight take a big breath in through your nose let the oxygen fill your lungs then take a big breath out.

Sounds pretty easy right if you can do that 10 or 15 times then you’ll feel physically and mentally revitalized. The sudden flow of oxygen will give your body a boost in performance.

While that moment of relaxation gives you a chance to de-stress oh and the best part is you can use this trick as often as you want breathing will always be good for you. So don’t be afraid to take a breath whenever you’re feeling tired.

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Ali Dgr
ILLUMINATION

"Words that inspire change. Health, fitness, lifestyle, personal growth, self-care. Join me on this incredible journey! 🚀"