Man owning a rural property and all the work to maintain it is nuts. Hardly the utopian lifestyle one might picture. Even a little house just outside of some big city where you've got 4 acres of land is a huge time investment to look after. Stress is based on how you structure your life. The idea that city life = stressful and rural life = chilled out is such a myth.
Agreed. I live in the city and the pace of life is faster, in the sense that you count time by the digits instead of by the sun's position in the sky or the changing of seasons. I've taken toward a more zen lifestyle as of late and it's diminished my stress levels by a major amount.
Stress is often rooted in a feeling that you lack control in your life, so "getting away from it all" and moving out into the country where you have acres of land in your domain is a typical reaction manifested by the desire to regain control. A more sensible reaction would be to start retaking control of your existing life little-by-little, and establishing solid routines goes a long way toward that.
Some basic routines I've incorporated into my life lately are simple things like going to bed and waking up at the same time
every day, or doing laundry at the same time each week, or preparing meals for the week during the weekend. I find a healthy diet goes far toward busting stress and by preparing healthy meals for the week on the weekend I never have to worry about eating healthy during the week when my schedule gets hectic. It's easy to just grab a lunch from the freezer then pop it in a microwave when it's time to eat.
Once a good routine is established for your weekly life, you can look at ways to streamline the rest of your life. Sometimes luxuries that you think would make life easier actually compound your stress. Take a cell phone for example. A lot of people use smartphones now, which might provide some entertainment when you've got time to kill but it's not productive. Having a smartphone also means the temptation of reading every email as soon as you get them, despite the fact that the contents of those emails can often cause stress by forcing you to think about how to respond or react to the situation presented.
Another good example is owning a car. While it might be convenient to be able to just go anywhere anytime, it also means spending more money on your transportation and having to worry about maintenance, the cost of gas and insurance premiums. Not only that, but having the ability to just hop in your car and go anywhere leaves you a victim to your impulses. I can't even remember how many times I'd nip out to the drive-thru or liquor store just on an impulse because it took only 10 minutes by car.
Anyway, I'm sure you get the point I'm trying to make. Take control where you can in your life. Establish strict routines to keep yourself from getting overextended, streamline your expenditures to cut out crap you don't
really need, take more vacations with the money you save and fuck the shit you had no chance of controlling in the first place
