A Prescription-Free Stress Reliever
Nearly 73% of Americans report that their mental health has faced negative repercussions due to stress and anxiety while only 37% believe they have helpful tools to manage these feelings. Expressive writing is an effective method to reduce stress and anxiety. Despite its proven benefits, critics suggest that expressive writing’s impact is limited and unreliable due to the individual, study design, or placebo effect. While stress is a natural human response, becoming aware of solutions, such as expressive writing, can help minimize these feelings for an overall anxiety-reduced lifestyle. By addressing common critiques, we can allow for further education on the benefits of expressive writing for stress and anxiety relief.
Critics argue that most studies done on expressive writing involve small groups, such as college students studying in one institution, making it difficult to apply these results to a larger audience. However, a study conducted in 2023 showed that classes requiring students to practice mindfulness techniques such as expressive writing show consistent stress and anxiety improvements across many institutions and student populations, incorporating a diverse group of participants. While there is a need for large-scale studies, existing research points to the ability to reduce stress using expressive writing.
Some suggest that the stress-relief benefits of expressive writing are simply a placebo effect. As you expect positive results, you will experience improvement through the expectation, not the process. A case study done in 2021 shows that the practice leads to physiological and emotional changes, such as lowering cortisol levels and improved mood. Expressive writing helps possess emotion and organize thoughts. These effects cannot be intertwined with expectation and the placebo effect. The evidence from this case clearly shows that this process goes beyond the placebo effect, resulting in genuine stress reduction.
Critics will argue that the act of expressive writing is not universal, as its benefits depend on the individual, such as their willingness to write, their personality, etc. However, a study conducted in 2013 demonstrated that expressive writing is versatile and can be tailored to the individual’s needs. For example, unlike other therapeutic approaches such as therapy, there is no definite schedule for when and where you can write. By simply having a book to write in, expressive writing can be done at any time, anywhere. Expressive writing has no rules, so depending on what you are feeling and what you believe you need to express, you are able to write and relieve your stress on your own terms. Variability is common in therapeutic approaches and does not lessen its overall efficiency.
Expressive is accessible and effective tool, allowing for participants to process their emotions and manage their stress, overall becoming an adaptable practice to individual needs and preferences. Although there are doubts and concerns about how the placebo effect and variability in results to expressive writing, they do not diminish the evidence supporting its benefits to stress and anxiety reduction. By challenging these critiques and raising education on expressive writing, participants will find their overall mental and physical health to flourish.Expressive writing is an effective method for reducing stress and anxiety. Despite its proven benefits, critics have raised concerns about how well it can be applied, due to factors such as the placebo effect, individual factors, and study design. However, these critiques do not acknowledge the proven emotional and stress-relieving effects that expressive writing has on an individual.
Needs References
Every one of your Introductory sentences makes good logical sense, PRBlog, but you WASTE good sentences when you don’t TELL READERS what to DO with them.
—Very nice. You’ve established a problem for which most sufferers have not identified a remedy.
—You identify a potential remedy, but you don’t CONNECT writing to the anxiety-ridden sufferers. You might not think you have to, but you do.
—You’ve already wasted the chance to connect sufferers with a remedy. And NOW you question its effectiveness.
—THEN, after hinting that a remedy for stress might exist, and THEN QUESTIONING its effectiveness, you present this DIMINISHED HOPE to sufferers.
—Finally, when you have a chance to REDEEM expressive writing as a remedy, you hedge. You fail to commit. You betray the solution you secretly believe in.
Want to see an alternative?
Wednesday’s in-class Feedback Session should have helped you craft a more compelling First Paragraph for a Rebuttal Argument, PRBlog. I haven’t seen any revisions since you got some feedback on DEC 01 and none since yesterday. I’ll grade this. Put it back into Feedback Please if you want another go.
To be SURE I get back to you timely, drop me a suggestion about the sort of feedback you desire.
The study you mention SOUNDS LIKE a meta-analysis that combines the results of several studies, but you don’t cite it, and there’s no source in the nonexistent References list to help us find it.
Your repeated allusions to unnamed “critics” refuted by references to unnamed “studies” doesn’t compel much agreement from your readers, PRBlog. Your Rewrite needs a Rewrite.