Steps You Can Take Now to Manage Stress
Doctors, scientists, and the media warn us that stress is toxic and that ‘We Must Calm Down’ or suffer the health consequences. This causes a dilemma for many of us. How many people do we know who lead stress-free lives? And how often, despite our best efforts to manage stress or avoid it, do we encounter at least a moderate level of it on a regular basis?
The problem is that stress is the result of caring about something; it is human and it is inevitable. – Donald Meichenbaum
Neurologically, a stress response is a milder form of a fear response (fight, flight, or freeze, for example). Whenever we feel vulnerable, our brain releases stress hormones that enable us to react quickly, with the aim of protecting us from physical harm but also from emotional harm. Even a remote threat of shame, failure, or loss can trigger a stress response. This is why it is so important to manage stress.
Healthier Stress?
Health Psychologist, Kelly McGonigal, explains that we experience two types of stress responses, distress and lesser-known eustress. Eustress is distress’s healthier and more helpful cousin.
When we feel stressed, hormones cortisol and adrenaline enable us to react swiftly by bypassing our critical thinking. Ever have an emotional outburst that left you feeling perplexed or remorseful later? Blame your distress response.
However, McGonical’s research suggests that if we feel prepared for a stressful event, our brain also releases neurochemicals that counter the kneejerk emotional reaction. Our eustress response releases DHEA and oxytocin that help us to focus, learn from our mistakes, and connect with others.
We may switch between eustress and distress easily in the same situation. An activity like skiing can trigger eustress while we are enjoying the steep slopes and then can intensify into distress when we get tired or hit an icy patch.
Turn Distress Into Eustress
Our eustress and distress responses depend more on whether we think we can handle the stressor than on the stressor itself. Thus, changing our perceptions about stress can greatly impact our ability to cope with stressful events. Here is how.
Name It to Tame It
Lack of clarity about our own stress makes it hard to know which resources we need to cope. Author of, I Know What To Do, So Why Don’t I Do It, Nick Hall, suggests that the first step to getting better at our ability to manage stress is to name it:
- Name the stressor. The ‘future,’ ‘family,’ or ‘relationship’ are too vague to be useful. What particular part of your future is stressful? Be as specific as possible.
- Name your reactions. What thoughts, bodily sensations, emotions, and actions occur when you are stressed? What is your role in maintaining the stress level? For example, do you tend to procrastinate when you need to have a difficult conversation with someone?
- Name the changeable. Identify which aspects you are able to change, which ones are challenging but doable, and which ones you can’t change.
- Focus on what you can change. Choose one thing at a time and focus on changing that one thing. Then move on to the next.
Increase Confidence In Your Ability to Manage Stress
Reflect on a past occasion when you coped well with a stressful situation. Which skills and strengths did you use (imagination, resilience, determination, knowledge, compassion)?
- Focus on your skills and resources. Which of your strengths can you use to cope now? What external resources can you employ to help (support from others or training)?
- Learn and prepare. Stress is often caused by uncertainty. What more can you find out about the situation? The more you know, the more you can prepare for eventualities.
- Imagine that your stress response is helping you cope well with the stressor. When you change your perception of your stress, your brain chemicals change too. So when you encounter a dilemma, visualize yourself using your resources to overcome it. Motivation researcher Gabriele Oettingen suggests that visualization is not only good for problem-solving but also relieves stress. This is because our brain rewards us with the feel-good chemical, dopamine, no matter whether our accomplishments are real or imagined.
- Make and complete small attainable goals every day. When we set a goal such as ‘Do Taxes’ or ‘Learn Spanish,’ we clump all of the time, effort, and resources that it will take into one image of far-off, fuzzy, unachievable-ness. Then every day that we don’t achieve it, we let ourselves down. This repeated sense of failure conditions our brain to associate the goal with feelings of distress, which means that we are more likely to procrastinate, causing further distress. On the other hand, when we set and achieve even small goals, we increase our confidence in our abilities and increase the likelihood of a eustress reaction.
- Include rewards. Just as we tend to avoid unpleasantness, our brains thrive on positivity. A pat on the back (or a margarita at sunset) reinforces our sense of achievement. Stick with it. The positive effects are cumulative.
- Get a Massage! Massage helps the body reabsorb cortisol (the stress hormone) and produce endorphins, your body’s natural “feel good chemical”.
Change the Way You View Stress
Changing attitudes towards stress may not change the stressful situation. However, when we believe that our stress response is evidence that we are not coping well and that our distress is harming our bodies, we are piling stress on top of stress. Consider the number of times per day, week, or month that we think about stress and the cumulative effect that negative self-talk has on us.
Changing our stress perception makes us less fearful of stressful situations. McGonigal suggests if we believe that stress is an inevitable and a normal part our everyday experience and can actually help us, we pave the way for a healthier stress response.