Before you contemplate moving to a farm, selling your smartphone on eBay, raising chickens and goats and cutting technology out of your life forever despite your love of selfies, WAIT -- there's a solution.
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

Have you noticed that checking your email impacts how you feel? For example, have you ever been in a situation in which you were feeling great until you received an email out of the blue that completely upset the entire rest of your day? How about those days when you received 30 such emails first thing in the morning?

Well you're right, email does powerfully impact how we think and feel! In fact, research shows it does so in five important ways. Here's your brain on email:

Stress

There's a reason why: Research shows that just looking through your inbox can significantly increase your stress levels (see research described here).

Why is this? Let's start by defining stress. Stress is the experience of having too great a task to accomplish with too few resources to meet the demand. In the past, for our ancestors, this stress might have looked like meeting a hungry wild animal in the jungle. Today, however, it takes on a much more simple -- yet equally powerful form -- an inbox. Email overload is just another way in which we experience that there is too great a task (the huge list of to-dos) to handle. In the study mentioned above, email overload had a lot to do with the stress response as measured psychologically and physiologically through heart rate, blood pressure and a measure of cortisol (the "stress hormone").

Well-Being

Is it just the amount of emails that lead to stress though? There's another element that we are forgetting. The emotional impact of each email. Think about it, usually, in our email-less past, we would experience maybe one highly emotional event a day or maybe two or three at the most, e.g. a confrontation with a colleague, perhaps a spat with a spouse, and/or a phone call from an angry neighbor. Our stress response is evolved to handle and recover from a small number of stressful situations but not a whole host of them. Unless we live in unusually extreme situations such as war zones, for example, our life usually doesn't have frequent and sequential stressors thrown at us.

Today, however, just sitting down at our desk to check our email with a cup of coffee can bring on a deluge of emotional assailants. Between 30-300 different emotional stimuli are delivered to you within the span of minutes. From an email from your boss asking you to complete a task urgently, to a passive-aggressive message from a family-member, to news from a colleague that he's out sick and you have to take over his workload. One hour of email can take you through a huge range of emotions and stressors. Sure, you can get happy emails too -- photos of your nephews, someone's marriage announcement -- but unfortunately, research on the negativity bias shows that our brain clings more to the negative and they don't always balance out.

Emotional Intelligence

That's when our emotional intelligence is impacted. We know that when our stress response is activated, the parts of our brain that respond with fear of anxiety tend to take over, weakening our ability to make rational choices and to reason logically (see this study). You may be stressed, what's more, your own ability to respond appropriately is impacted. We know that our emotions impact the way we act. You're going to reply with a different tone if you're upset (even at someone other than your email recipient) than if you're not.

Self-Control

Have you ever pressed "send" only to regret it moments later? Don't blame yourself. Research shows that getting depleted because you have too much on your plate can reduce your self-control. For example, it can make you take more risks when maybe you should be more cautious (e.g., this study). It's harder to have a say over our impulses when there's just too much going on. As in too many emails, with too many different messages leading to increased stress and emotional overload.

Productivity

When you're doing a million emails -- all about different topics and requesting you for different things, you are, by definition in a situation of overwhelmed multitasking. And multitasking, research shows, is linked to lower productivity and makes you lose a lot of time out of our day!

So what's the answer to the assailment of email on our lives?

Before you contemplate moving to a farm, selling your smartphone on eBay, raising chickens and goats and cutting technology out of your life forever despite your love of selfies, WAIT -- there's a solution. Think about it, email didn't exist 10 years ago! If you'd like some tips, here are 30 tested ways to conquer your inbox fast.

Close

HuffPost Shopping’s Best Finds

MORE IN LIFE