The laser treatment is safe, non-invasive, drug free and painless. It involves the application of a cold, soft laser beam that targets specific energy points located on the hands, ears, nose, wrists, legs and feet.
The Laser helps stimulate the release of endorphins, our own natural body chemical, which helps with the relief of pain and stress. Laser treatment can help reduce stress levels, and restore balance.
Laser Therapy is a well-established therapeutic technique with a wide range of medical applications.
The Anne Penman method utilizes a cold, soft laser beam which is applied to specific energy points on the hands, ears, nose and, wrists and feet.
Our procedure helps to promote the release of endorphins, natural chemicals in the body associated with the spontaneous relief of pain and stress. When using the Anne Penman Laser Therapy method, clients experience a soothing feeling of well-being. The laser acts as a calming agent helping to greatly reduce stress levels. As everyone reacts differently to stress, the program is tailored to individual needs. This means that, regardless of your stress level, the program can help you achieve your goal.
Guidance focuses on self-belief and positive thinking. During the treatment we help you deal with the emotional, physical and psychological aspects of stress.
Our telephone hot-line is there to offer extra support and focuses on individual need.
The Anne Penman Laser Therapy program is designed to help you deal with the emotional, physical and psychological aspects of changing your lifestyle. You will understand the dynamics of coping with stress in every day situations.
You are in control and your Anne Penman technician will provide support and encouragement on an ongoing basis.
One month lasting ‘Stress Management Package’, includes weekly laser therapy sessions for four weeks
Stress: Win control over the stress in your life
Your body's stress reaction was meant to protect you. But when it's constantly on alert, your health can pay the price. Take steps to control your stress.
By Mayo Clinic staff
Stress is a normal psychological and physical reaction to the demands of life. But when you're unable to cope well with the stress in your life, your mind and body may pay the price.
Your body is hard-wired by nature to react to stress in a way originally meant to protect you against perceived threats from predators and aggressors. But today's many demands may include managing a huge workload, making ends meet, taking care of aging parents as well as young children, and simply making it through the morning rush hour. You may feel overwhelmed by these daily stressors and wonder if you'll ever get a handle on all of these extra "threats" — you can empower yourself to do so.
If your mind and body are constantly on edge because of excessive stress in your life, you may face serious health problems. That's because your body's "fight-or-flight reaction" — its natural alarm system — is constantly on.
When you encounter perceived threats — a large dog barks at you during your morning walk, for instance — your hypothalamus, a tiny region at the base of your brain, sets off an alarm system in your body. Through a combination of nerve and hormonal signals, this system prompts your adrenal glands, located atop your kidneys, to release a surge of hormones, including adrenaline and cortisol.
The body's stress-response system is usually self-regulating. It decreases hormone levels and enables your body to return to normal once a perceived threat has passed. As adrenaline and cortisol levels drop, your heart rate and blood pressure return to baseline levels, and other systems resume their regular activities.
But when the stressors of your life are always present, leaving you constantly feeling stressed, tense, nervous or on edge, that fight-or-flight reaction stays turned on. The less control you have over potentially stress-inducing events and the more uncertainty they create, the more likely you are to feel stressed. Even the typical day-to-day demands of living can contribute to your body's stress response.
The long-term activation of the stress-response system — and the subsequent overexposure to cortisol and other stress hormones — can disrupt almost all your body's processes. This puts you at increased risk of numerous health problems, including:
That's why it's so important to learn healthy ways to cope with the stressors in your life.
Your reaction to a potentially stressful event is different from anyone else's. How you react to stressors in your life includes such factors as:
You may have some friends who seem laid-back about almost everything and others who react strongly at the slightest stress. Most reactions to life stressors fall somewhere between those extremes.
Learning to react to life stressors in a healthy way
Stressful events are a fact of life. And you may not be able to change your current situation.
But you can take steps to manage the impact these events have on you. You can learn to identify what stresses you out, how to take control of some stress-inducing circumstances, and how to take care of yourself physically and emotionally in the face of stressful situations.