This industry is brutal. I’m tearing my body apart for $16 an hour just continuously reminding myself that I’m learning a lot and this isn’t forever, but man is it kicking my ass. What do you all do to unwind? Is booze/weed really all there is to help you chill out at the end of the day?

  • Clerkle@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    25 days ago

    Substance use is a major cause of unhealthy and abusive kitchen dynamics. Illicit substances render the user increasingly less capable ongoingly. Plus, the notorious attraction to that absence of drug checks brings those challenging social dynamics together into a hot, compact, and stressful interactive environment that represses honest emotional expressiveness amidst customers. Stress compounds and needs transformation. Recognize that bad formula, and instead nourish healthy therapeutics into your physiology from the opposite end of the sprectrum. If you smoke or drink, ease off as much as possible for as long as possible. I’m so glad I replaced those habits with healthy substances. So instead, look to nootropics for physical performance and clarity, and supercharge your days with high quality nutritional foods into your diet and with good hydration with enough quality water kept onhand (RO or artesian).

    Constant supply of your favorite snack fruits can really help make a stressful kitchen into a managable experience. A large shaker bottle full of snackable frozen grapes or berries while on the job can feel nice. Or your favorite nuts with rasins and dark chocolate chips. That might just be my opinion. Higher end grocery stores have some great bulk bin goodies.

    My effective decompression approach: Earbuds, my best music, solo racquetball or solo tennis practice against a handball wall (energetic overhead serves only), and sweat.

    Its a simple, free (which is cheaper than golf and batting cages), and it’s a great solitary interactive medium that transforms an emotional need to physically exert stressful energy into positive exercise which won’t incur embodiment of physical stress (like weightlifting), and in a way that’s uplifting in that it effectively dissolves stress and creates a sense of situational command over an inanimate medium (the ball) while increasing physiological capacity. That’s a nice inversion of subjectional and exhausting kitchen labor.

    Equipment is best hunted at major thrift stores such as Goodwill. Tennis balls can always be collected as used from local tennis court trash cans; the firmer the ball, the better, but for now you just need something that will safely bounce off a racquet.

    Afterwards, before stepping into a steamy shower or hot bath for a while with some decompressing tunes, make some strong chammomile tea and take 5-HTP with it. That’s tryptophan, but it will mostly only just settle nerves and maybe relax your mind a little to help you recenter and mastermind those stresses, same with the chammomile. Jarrow Formulas is a good supplement quality. The single 50mg capsules are effective.

    If you’re ending shifts late at night, walks in peaceful areas are also a nice and easy option. Walk it off. If you’re up for a jog, even better. Bike rides or a stationary bike can be great options. Exercise helps balance the mind. Jam that stress out into sweat and positivity.

    A gym membership can offer some great exercise equipment too (bikes, ellipticals, treadmills, row machines) which can be nice after work late at night, especially if there’s a pool and sauna or even just showers. Focus on expending energy through exercise, not stressful weight loads. Weights will conort any existing physical embodiment of work stress and any physical stress from poor sleep quality. Loosening up with exercise, and also chiropractics and stretches will increase your capacity to handle stress more gracefully on the job because you’ll move and breathe better which will help you think, interact, and perform better.

    I hope this proves helpful.