Stress is mental or emotional pressure exerted on someone by others, by situations or by themselves. This pressure is part and parcel of everyday life and is not necessarily negative.
Positive stress provides us with the energy to take risks, to tackle new projects, to confront demanding situations that we know need our conviction and expertise. Positive stress empowers us to climb a mountain, change a tyre, walk out on a stage or write a letter. Positive stress puts the zing into life and fuels our passion for delight and adventure. Stress only becomes harmful when it begins to exceed our ability to cope.
Hans Selye, a famous endocrinologist who pioneered work on the stress response, defined stress as the body’s nonspecific response to a demand placed on it. Negative stress occurs when we feel that we do not have the skills or resources to meet that demand. If this demand continues or is frequently recurrent, stress may become chronic.
Chronic stress is very common. It essentially means that the nervous system is on constant alert as though danger were ever present. Optimally your body is in a state of internal balance where all systems function smoothly. However, stress releases a complex cocktail of hormones which readies your body for action and the physiological effects may include:
Once the demand, the threat or the situation is over, the body should return to its state of normal equilibrium and the physiological effects should diminish. However, when stress has become chronic, the body loses its ability to return to normal, and exhaustion may result. This is caused by the depletion of the body’s resources and a loss of the ability to adapt, and may have long-term effects on the cardiovascular system, the digestive system or the immune system.
Reality is the leading cause of stress for those in touch with it.
Jane Wagner