WHAT IS STRESS?
We are all familiar with the word "stress". Stress is
when you are worried about getting laid off your job, or
worried about having enough money to pay your bills, or
worried about your mother when the doctor says she may
need an operation. In fact, to most of us, stress is synonymous
with worry. If it is something that makes you worry, then
it is stress.
Your body, however, has a much broader definition of stress.
TO YOUR BODY, STRESS IS SYNONYMOUS WITH CHANGE. Anything
that causes a change in your life causes stress. It doesn't
matter if it is a "good" change, or a "bad" change, they
are both stress. When you find your dream apartment and
get ready to move, that is stress. If you break your leg,
that is stress. Good or bad, if it is a CHANGE in your
life, it is stress as far as your body is concerned.
Even IMAGINED CHANGE is stress. (Imagining changes is
what we call "worrying".) If you fear that you will not
have enough money to pay your rent, that is stress. If
you worry that you may get fired, that is stress. If you
think that you may receive a promotion at work, that is
also stress (even though this would be a good change).
Whether the event is good or bad, imagining changes in
your life is stressful.
Anything that causes CHANGE IN YOUR DAILY ROUTINE is stressful.
Anything that causes CHANGE IN YOUR BODY HEALTH is stressful.
IMAGINED CHANGES are just as stressful as real changes.
Let us look at several types of stress -- ones that are
so commonplace that you might not even realize that they
are stressful.......
Emotional Stress
When arguments, disagreements, and conflicts cause CHANGES
in your personal life -- that is stress.
Illness
Catching a cold, breaking an arm, a skin infection, a
sore back, are all CHANGES in your body condition.
Pushing Your Body
Too Hard
A major source of stress is overdriving yourself.
If you are working (or partying) 16 hours a day,
you will have reduced your available time for rest.
Sooner or later, the energy drain on your system
will cause the body to fall behind in its repair
work. There will not be enough time or energy for
the body to fix broken cells, or replace used up
brain neurotransmitters. CHANGES will occur in your
body's internal environment. You will "hit the
wall," "run out of gas". If you continue,
permanent damage may be done. The body's fight to
stay healthy in the face of the increased energy
that your are expending is major stress. |
Stress has become such an ingrained part
of our vocabulary we think it is something that
has been around forever. You might be amazed
to learn that that our current use of the term
originated only a little more than 50 years ago,
when it was essentially "coined" by Hans Selye.
It may, or may not reduce your stress level to
know it is a modern phrase, but if you would like
to blame anyone for coining it' then go here.........
|
Environmental Factors
Very hot or very cold climates can be stressful. Very
high altitude may be a stress. Toxins or poisons are a
stress. Each of these factors threatens to cause CHANGES
in your body's internal environment.
The Special Case of Tobacco Use
Tobacco is a powerful toxin!! Smoking destroys cells that
clean your trachea, bronchi, and lungs. Smoking causes
emphysema and chronic bronchitis, which progress to slow
suffocation. The carbon monoxide from cigarette smoking
causes chronic carbon monoxide poisoning. Tobacco use damages
the arteries in your body, causing insufficient blood supply
to the brain, heart, and vital organs. Cigarette smoking
increases the risk of cancer 50 fold.
Chewing tobacco or snuff is no safe haven. It also damages
your arteries, and it carries the same cancer risk. (Cancers
of the head and neck are particularly vicious, disfiguring,
and deadly).
Poisoning the body with carbon monoxide, and causing the
physical illnesses of emphysema, chronic bronchitis, cancer,
and arterial damage, tobacco is a powerful source of added
stress to one's life.
Hormonal Factors
PUBERTY
The vast hormonal changes of puberty are severe stressors.
A person's body actually CHANGES shape, sexual organs begin
to function, new hormones are released in large quantities.
Puberty, as we all know, is very stressful.
PRE-MENSTRUAL SYNDROME
Once a woman passes puberty, her body is designed to function
best in the presence of female hormones. For women past
puberty, a lack of female hormones is a major stress on
the body. Once a month, just prior to menstruation, a woman's
hormone levels drop sharply. In many women, the stress
of sharply falling hormones is enough to create a temporary
OVERSTRESS. This temporary OVERSTRESS is popularly known
as Pre Menstrual Syndrome (PMS).
POST-PARTUM
Following a pregnancy, hormone levels CHANGE dramatically.
After a normal childbirth, or a miscarriage, some women
may be thrown into OVERSTRESS by loss of the hormones of
pregnancy.
MENOPAUSE
There is another time in a woman's life when hormone levels
decline. This is the menopause. The decline in hormones
during menopause is slow and steady. Nevertheless, this
menopausal decline causes enough stress on the body to
produce OVERSTRESS in many women.
Taking Responsibility for Another Person's Actions
When you take responsibility for another person's actions,
CHANGES occur in your life over which you have little or
no control. Taking responsibility for another person's
actions is a major stressor.
Allergic Stress
Allergic reactions are a part of your body's natural defence
mechanism. When confronted with a substance which your
body considers toxic, your body will try to get rid of
it, attack it, or somehow neutralize it. If it is something
that lands in your nose, you might get a runny nose. If
it lands on your skin, you might get blistery skin. If
you inhale it, you'll get wheezy lungs. If you eat it,
you may break out in itchy red hives all over your body.
Allergy is a definite stress, requiring large changes in
energy expenditure on the part of your body's defence system
to fight off what the body perceives as a dangerous attack
by an outside toxin.
Steve Burns/Kimberley Burns Full
info and stress tests
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