Dealing With Stress
There are probably as many definitions of stress as there are causes. Stress means different things to different people. There are the type that thrive on the adrenaline rush of a frantic lifestyle and constant crises, while others feel the stress when their routine is upset in the slightest.
Most folks fall in-between these extremes. We all need some stress to function normally. Stress gets us out of bed in the morning and through the day, and a completely stress-free life would be dull and boring. When the stress feelings, pressure, strain or tension affect the quality of our daily lives it is time to make changes to repair the damage and prevent a recurrence.
Good Stress - Bad Stress
Your immune system may benefit from short spurts of stress. The type of stress you may experience when you have to sit an exam could be good for you, says a new study. Long-term stress, on the other hand, is not good for you. If you suffer from continuous stress, the same continuous stress, such as the stress experienced by people with some disabilities, your immune system will suffer.
You can read about this study in the journal Psychological Bulletin. The authors of the study are Dr Suzanne Segerstrom, University of Kentucky, USA, and Dr Gregory Miller, University of British Columbia, Canada
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We have all known about the unpleasant effects stress can have on our health. This research shows that some types of stress can be beneficial.
The two scientists reviewed 300 scientific papers involving about 19,000 people.
What Is Good Stress?
Most stresses that activate our ‘fight or flight’ response are considered to be good. Our fight or flight response comes way back when we were living in caves and walked around with clubs. When we were threatened by predators our fight or flight response was activated. This response mechanism still exists in all of us and it boosts our body’s natural front-line defence against infections from traumas such as bites and scrapes.
If you know the stress is short term, then it may be good for you.
What Is Bad Stress?
Any stress that is long-term and brings about long-term anxiety is considered to be bad for our immune systems (and general health). Anything that turns your world upside-down is bad stress. Here are some examples:
Long Term Care for a person with dementia or paralysis
Financial Worries
Losing a Partner
Natural Disasters
Being abused as a child
Having a long term disability
The elderly and people who are already ill are more vulnerable to the negative effects of bad stress.
Symptoms
As the stress level increases, or if it lasts over a longer period of time, a person may begin to feel more severe emotional or physical effects:
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