skills$openclaw/stress-relief
jhillin81.3k

by jhillin8

stress-relief – OpenClaw Skill

stress-relief is an OpenClaw Skills integration for data analytics workflows. Manage stress with quick techniques, stress logging, and recovery tools

1.3k stars4.2k forksSecurity L1
Updated Feb 7, 2026Created Feb 7, 2026data analytics

Skill Snapshot

namestress-relief
descriptionManage stress with quick techniques, stress logging, and recovery tools OpenClaw Skills integration.
ownerjhillin8
repositoryjhillin8/stress-relief
languageMarkdown
licenseMIT
topics
securityL1
installopenclaw add @jhillin8/stress-relief
last updatedFeb 7, 2026

Maintainer

jhillin8

jhillin8

Maintains stress-relief in the OpenClaw Skills directory.

View GitHub profile
File Explorer
2 files
.
_meta.json
280 B
SKILL.md
3.2 KB
SKILL.md

name: stress-relief description: Manage stress with quick techniques, stress logging, and recovery tools author: clawd-team version: 1.0.0 triggers:

  • "stressed out"
  • "stress relief"
  • "overwhelmed"
  • "need to decompress"
  • "too much stress"

Stress Relief

Reclaim calm in minutes, not hours. Quick techniques, stress insights, and recovery tools built right into your workflow.

What it does

  • Quick relief: Breathing exercises, progressive muscle relaxation, immediate grounding techniques
  • Stress logging: Automatic tracking of stress events with context and intensity
  • Pattern recognition: Identify triggers, peak stress times, and recurring stressors
  • Recovery tools: Guided decompression, breaks, and boundary-setting prompts
  • Trend analysis: Weekly summaries of stress levels and improvement areas

Usage

Quick Relief

Trigger immediate stress-busting techniques when you need it fast.

  • 60-second breathing exercise (4-7-8 technique)
  • 2-minute progressive muscle relaxation
  • 5-minute grounding (5 senses method)

Log Stress

Record stress events as they happen or reflect at the end of your day.

  • Intensity level (1-10)
  • What triggered it
  • Physical symptoms
  • Context (work, personal, health, etc)

Identify Triggers

Find patterns in what's causing stress without judgment.

  • Most common triggers this week
  • Time-of-day patterns
  • Situations that escalate stress most
  • Recurring vs. one-time stressors

Decompress

Guided recovery after high-stress periods.

  • Progressive wind-down sequences
  • Boundary-setting reminders
  • Post-stress reflection prompts
  • Recovery mode activation

Review Patterns

Weekly insights on your stress landscape.

  • Stress trend (up/down/stable)
  • Top 3 triggers this week
  • Improvement areas to focus on
  • Recovery success rate

Techniques

Breathing - 4-7-8 technique: Inhale for 4 counts, hold for 7, exhale for 8. Signals your nervous system to calm down.

Progressive Muscle Relaxation - Tense and release muscle groups from toes to head. Takes 2 minutes, breaks the stress cycle physically.

Quick Walks - 5 minutes outside or around your space. Movement + fresh air reset cortisol levels fast.

Brain Dump - Write everything on your mind without filtering. Gets it out of your head and onto a page where you can process it.

Boundaries - Say no to non-essential tasks during high-stress periods. Protect your capacity before it's gone.

Tips

  • Start small - One technique is better than none. Master breathing first, add others later.
  • Log consistently - Even 30 seconds of note-taking reveals patterns you can't see in real time.
  • Use triggers as alerts - If you notice escalating stress, shift to quick relief before it compounds.
  • Recovery is active - Don't wait to feel better; use decompression tools to actively lower stress.
  • All data stays local on your machine - No cloud syncing, no external servers. Your stress patterns are yours alone.

If You're in Crisis

This skill is not a substitute for professional help.

  • 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline)
  • Text HOME to 741741 (Crisis Text Line)

If you're in immediate danger, call emergency services (911 in the US).

README.md

No README available.

Permissions & Security

Security level L1: Low-risk skills with minimal permissions. Review inputs and outputs before running in production.

Requirements

  • OpenClaw CLI installed and configured.
  • Language: Markdown
  • License: MIT
  • Topics:

FAQ

How do I install stress-relief?

Run openclaw add @jhillin8/stress-relief in your terminal. This installs stress-relief into your OpenClaw Skills catalog.

Does this skill run locally or in the cloud?

OpenClaw Skills execute locally by default. Review the SKILL.md and permissions before running any skill.

Where can I verify the source code?

The source repository is available at https://github.com/openclaw/skills/tree/main/skills/jhillin8/stress-relief. Review commits and README documentation before installing.