Living with Stress
Living with Stress
2007
MassChiro
Stress is a physical and mental response to the difference between our expectations and our personal experience, real or imaginary. While reacting to stress, the body goes through alarm, resistance, and exhaustion.
When the body releases the hormone epinephrine, or adrenaline, it is preparing the body for physical action (Ïfight or flightÓ) by increasing heart rate, blood pressure, and blood glucose levels. Then, the body releases glucocorticoid cortisol, or hydrocortisone, producing anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressing effects.
Consequences of Chronic Stress
Although occasional stress can be of benefit, too much stress is taxing on the body. Excessive levels of glucocorticoids can hinder growth, delay wound healing, and increase risk of infection. Chronic stressorsÛor their constant anticipationÛcan make us believe that we must always be on guard, leading to anxiety. Feelings of hopelessness or avoiding solving our problems can spark depression. Past or present psychological distress can also lead to pain, particularly low-back pain, which often comes with leg pain, headaches, sleep problems, anxiety, and depression. Stress may even be a more powerful pain generator than strenuous physical activity or repetitive motion. Research shows, for example, that pain in adolescents is associated with depression and stress, but not with computer use or physical activity.
Common Stressors
Our lives are surrounded by stressors. Some of the common ones include:
- Bright light, loud sounds
- Events (births, deaths, war, reunions, weddings, divorce, moving)
- Financial difficulties
- Deadlines, rush-hour traffic, or exams
- Personal relationships and conflicts
- Smoking, excessive drinking, insufficient sleep, and poor diet
Stress is highly individual and depends on our circumstances. For example, we react to stress better if we can vent our frustrations, feel in control, hope that things will change for the better, and get social support. Exposure to stress in early childhood, however, can negatively affect the personÌs stress reaction. Gender also determines how we handle stress. Women are easily stressed by household problems, conflicts with people, or illness in people they know. Men get more significantly affected by job loss, legal problems, and work-related issues. Men are also more likely to get depressed over divorce or separation and work problems. Depression in women, however, is more likely to spring from interpersonal conflicts or low social support, particularly from family. To cope with stress, men focus on planning rational solutions to problems, positive thinking, humor, day-dreaming, and fantasies. Women seek out social support, or resort to self-blame or wishful thinking.
Stress and Personality
Our personality also influences how we cope with stressful life events. Optimism improves our coping ability by helping us make positive choices, set goals, and expect positive outcomes. Optimists often choose to eliminate, reduce, or manage stressors or emotionsÛinstead of ignoring, avoiding, or withdrawing from the problem, reactions that are often unhealthy. Optimism also predicts better outcomes in stressful medical procedures such as chemotherapy, prevents depression in the elderly, and is associated with healthy aging and lower cardiovascular mortality. Greater happiness has also been linked to lower cortisol levels, better stress responses, lower heart rate in men, and lower systolic blood pressure. Negative thinking, however, may cause depression. Self-esteem is another important quality. Interestingly, it can even affect our perception of past events. People with higher self-esteem tend to view past events as more positive than originally perceived, while low self esteem makes people recall their past events as more negative. Negative events also more seriously affect self-perception of people with unstable self esteem. Anger, however, doesnÌt help with stress managementÛand may be related to many health problems. Aggression can prolong tension-type headaches and lead to depression. Hostility may be related to inflammation and slower wound healing, placing the elderly at risk for coronary heart disease.
Stress on the Job
The workplace has become a major stressor, contributing to the risk of hypertension and heart disease. Recent studies have shown, however, that that stresses us out is not so much the job demands, but our attitude toward them. For example, people who react with anger to their high job strain or who are worried about their chronic work overload have much higher morning corsisol levels. Lack of a sense of control over a job is also associated with higher blood pressure, especially in women and in people with higher socioeconomic status.
Family Stress
But itÌs not just job stress that can affect our health. Marital problems can also make us feel stressed out, and elevate our cortisol levels and blood pressure. Family stress also affects children. Stressed-out mothers,for example, report more anxiety and negative emotions and are more frequently angry and intrusive with their children. Such parentsÌ harsh reactions to their childrenÌs negative emotions also increase the intensity of childrenÌs emotions, making it hard for the children to act in socially competent ways. Children also learn stress coping skills from their parents, so children of mothers who frequently express negative emotions also have more difficulty coping with their own daily stress. On the other hand, self esteem, which is very important to childrenÌs happiness, is associated with mothersÌ authoritative parenting style, when the issues are discussed with children, but the mother makes the final decision and establishes reasonable discipline.
Stress Relief Is Important
No matter what stresses you out, consider taking active steps to change your attitude toward stress and to reduce stress in your life.



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