
Discover Dr. Elissa Epel's science-backed seven-day plan to transform your relationship with stress. Endorsed by Arianna Huffington and Adam Grant, this toolkit doesn't just manage stress - it prevents it. Could "forest bathing" be your missing prescription for modern life?
Elissa Epel, Ph.D., is a professor and vice chair in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of California, San Francisco, where she directs the Aging, Metabolism, and Emotions Center. A leading authority on stress resilience and cellular aging, her work bridges psychology, metabolism, and chronic disease prevention. Her insights on stress reduction and healthy aging have been featured in The New York Times, 60 Minutes, NPR, and TEDMED, and she serves on the National Academy of Medicine.
Epel co-authored the New York Times bestseller The Telomere Effect with Nobel Laureate Elizabeth Blackburn, exploring how lifestyle choices impact genetic aging. Her latest book, The Stress Prescription, combines decades of clinical research with practical tools to transform stress into a catalyst for well-being. A pioneer in mindfulness-based interventions, she leads science-backed meditation retreats and advises organizations like the CDC and Apple on stress management strategies.
The Stress Prescription became an instant independent bookstore bestseller and is being translated into 15 languages, reflecting its global relevance in addressing modern stress challenges.
The Stress Prescription offers a science-backed 7-day plan to transform stress into strength through mindfulness, mindset shifts, and practical exercises. Dr. Epel combines decades of research on stress physiology with actionable strategies to cultivate resilience, joy, and emotional balance—focusing on leveraging brief stressors as energizing challenges rather than threats.
This book suits anyone experiencing chronic stress, burnout, or anxiety, particularly professionals, caregivers, and individuals navigating life transitions. It’s ideal for readers seeking evidence-based tools to improve mental health without eliminating stress entirely.
Yes—it distills complex stress science into accessible practices with immediate real-world applications. Praised by experts like Arianna Huffington and Adam Grant, it provides fresh perspectives on reframing stress as a catalyst for growth rather than a hindrance.
Key ideas include:
While The Telomere Effect explains stress’s cellular impacts (e.g., telomere shortening), The Stress Prescription focuses on practical interventions. It builds on earlier research but emphasizes daily habits over foundational science, making it more actionable for general readers.
Epel cites UCSF studies on cortisol patterns, heart rate variability, and cellular aging. Her work integrates neurobiology (e.g., amygdala regulation) and epigenetics, showing how mindset changes can reduce inflammatory responses linked to chronic diseases.
Yes—it features science-based meditations, breathwork sequences, and grounding techniques designed for 5–10 minute daily use. Examples include “micro-awareness pauses” and values visualization exercises to counteract rumination.
Absolutely. Epel provides strategies for reframing deadlines as energizing challenges, setting emotional boundaries, and using “stress reappraisal” to improve focus during high-pressure situations.
Some reviewers note the practices require consistent effort for lasting results, which may challenge those seeking quick fixes. However, most praise its balance of rigor and accessibility, with Psychology Today calling it a “powerhouse of feasible wisdom”.
Epel links climate wellness to stress resilience, advising readers to channel eco-anxiety into purposeful action while maintaining emotional equilibrium—a focus reflecting her UCSF Climate Change and Health Equity Center role.
Notable lines include:
With remote work and AI-driven productivity pressures intensifying, Epel’s framework helps navigate modern stressors like digital overload and uncertainty. Its focus on “stress inoculation” aligns with post-pandemic resilience trends.
通过作者的声音感受这本书
将知识转化为引人入胜、富含实例的见解
快速捕捉核心观点,高效学习
以有趣互动的方式享受这本书
The problem isn't stress itself but our relationship with it.
Our brains crave certainty to relax, but uncertainty has become a defining feature of modern life.
Control works when environments are stable and predictable, but becomes harmful when circumstances change unexpectedly.
Radical acceptance means embracing what we cannot change.
将《The Stress Prescription》的核心观点拆解为易于理解的要点,了解创新团队如何创造、协作和成长。
将《The Stress Prescription》提炼为快速记忆要点,突出坦诚、团队合作和创造力的关键原则。

通过生动的故事体验《The Stress Prescription》,将创新经验转化为令人难忘且可应用的精彩时刻。
随心提问,选择声音,共同创造真正与你产生共鸣的见解。

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What if stress isn't the enemy we've been taught to fear? Consider this: every racing heartbeat, every tense muscle, every sleepless night might not be a malfunction-but a message. For decades, we've waged war against stress, armed with meditation apps and self-care routines, yet we feel more overwhelmed than ever. The truth is far more nuanced and hopeful than the wellness industry wants us to believe. Stress isn't a toxin to be purged from our lives; it's a fundamental feature of being human, woven into our DNA by millions of years of evolution. The real crisis isn't that we experience stress-it's that we've forgotten how to dance with it. When we understand stress as information rather than injury, everything changes. Our cells tell stories about how we live, and remarkably, we have the power to edit those stories daily.