Stress Management: Understanding Stress
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Stress Management: Understanding Stress

   

Stress Management: Understanding Stress1

Joe Pergola and Suzanna Smith 2

Stress management begins with you. Your reaction to stressors is very important. Your response impacts how stressful situations will be to your body, mind, emotions, and relationships.

The first step to managing stress is awareness. You have to be aware of warning signs in your body that you are under stress. Then you can do something to stop stress.

Signs of Stress

How do you know you are stressed? You may be aware of certain patterns in how you react when faced with too many demands. Take a look at the list below and identify any signs that you are under stress. Pay close attention to physical warning signs as these are often the first clues that you are stressed.

Physical Warning Signs of Stress

• Faster heart rate

• Pounding heart

• Higher blood pressure

• Sweaty palms

• Muscle tightness of the chest, neck, jaw, or back

• Headache

• Diarrhea

• Constipation

• Trembling or twitching

• Stuttering

• Nausea or vomiting

• Sleep problems

• Fatigue

• Shallow breathing

• Dryness of mouth and throat

• Being easily startled

• Cold hands

• Itching

Emotional Warning Signs of Stress

• Irritability

• Angry outbursts

• Depression

• Jealousy

• Restlessness

• Anxiousness

• Lower initiative

• Less involvement with others

• Tendency to cry

• Lack of interest

• Being critical of others or yourself

• Nightmares

• Thinking about things over and over again

• Fewer positive feelings about things

Behavioral Warning Signs of Stress

• Increased smoking

• Aggressive behaviors, (e.g., in driving)

• More alcohol use

• More drug use

• Under- or over-eating

• Carelessness

• Withdrawal

• Listlessness

• Hostility

• Accident -proneness

• Nervous laughter

• Doing things over and over again

• Impatience

• Insomnia

Cognitive/Thinking Warning Signs of Stress

• Forgetfulness

• Preoccupation

• Blurred vision

• Errors in judging distance

• Less or more fantasies

• Lower creativity

• Lack of concentration

• Less productivity

• Lack of attention to details

• Thinking a lot about the past

• Slower reactions

• Less coordination

• Trouble paying attention

• Feeling bad about yourself

• Lack of control or need for too much control

• Little sense of meaning in life

What's Causing Stress?

The next step is to identify the situations that are causing you to feel stressed. When you find yourself tied up in knots, emotionally or physically, ask yourself, "What has just happened that makes me feel this way?" "Does this person, place, event, or thing make me feel this way?" Then check the symptoms from the list in the table.

Learning to Relax

Learning to relax is a powerful way to stop stress. Practice these few simple steps to calm down.

There are also simple relaxation exercises you can do on the spot.

Relaxation Exercises

A brief relaxation activity requires as little as 60-90 seconds. The objectives of these activities are to:

Step 1. Sit in a passive, comfortable position. Although this position may be most conducive to relaxation, you can do brief relaxation standing, waiting for an appointment, lying down, or as you prepare for an anticipated stressful event.

Step 2. Practice one or more of the following activities several times each day:

Deep breathing. Exhale slowly, and tell all your muscles to relax say as you exhale, "I feel tension and energy flowing out of my body." Repeat the above exercise five or six times and you'll become more relaxed.

Whole-body tension. Tense every muscle in your body; stay with that tension and hold it as long as you can without any pain. Slowly release the tension and very gradually feel it leave your body. Repeat three times. Notice how your feelings change.

Shoulder shrugs and head rolls. Try to raise your shoulders up to your ears. Hold for the count of four, then drop and your shoulders back to normal position. Rotate your head and neck. Vary this by rotating your shoulders up, down, and head and neck around first one way, then the other, then both at the same time.

Imagine air as a cloud. Open your imagination and focus on your breathing. As your breathing becomes calm and regular, imagine that the air comes to you as a cloud it fills you and goes out. Notice that your breathing becomes regular as you relax.

How Do You Look Stress?

Another important step in managing stress is to monitor how you look at or are thinking about the situation. What do you believe will happen? What do you think about your ability to deal with the problem?

Have you ever noticed that while one person sees a situation as a problem another views it as a challenge? The person's perspective on the situation may be more important than the situation. Research shows that adults who are optimistic have higher levels of mental and physical health than those who are more negative.

There seems to be a self-fulfilling prophecy at work: When you see a stressor as a problem or crisis it is likely to become a crisis because you feel unable to cope. But when you see an event as something that can be managed, you are likely to act quickly to solve a problem before it exhausts your available and reserve energy. In other words, how you perceive the situation influences how you react.

It is not clear what enables some people to "see a glass half full" while others see it "half empty." Outlook may be affected by the person's sense of autonomy and control. They feel independent and in charge of daily life. People who feel in control are more likely to believe they can handle a situation and are able to prevent it from becoming stressful. People who look at a situation as something they can handle are sure that it will be resolved and take steps to confront or solve the problem. This may prevent it from becoming worse. A loss of autonomy can be distressing and can hurt your emotional and physical health. On the other hand, maintaining autonomy can be beneficial.

In the later years of life, some events may decrease an older person's autonomy and control, such as retirement and reduced economic freedom, residential moves, and reduced mobility from physical impairments. Yet when older people are encouraged to do things for themselves, they maintain a sense of independence and physical health and express satisfaction with their lives.

Autonomy and control are also important for working people who often experience strains from long work hours and an assigned schedule. Control over the length and schedule of work hours seems to reduce feelings of helplessness and stress.

Although it is important to maintain autonomy and control, it may also be important to recognize when situations cannot be controlled. This avoids getting more frustrated and tense. What to do when a solution is out of reach? Change your outlook by "letting go" rather than forcing a solution. Another option is to reframe the situation, that is, to look at it in a different, more positive light. This technique often helps a person accept and feel better about the situation. Of course, there are times when reframing doesn't fit the situation. There are also times when it seems almost impossible to feel positive. It is important to accept these feelings as legitimate and valuable, too. Feeling sad, lonely, or afraid is not bad. With reflection and acceptance, even a problem may turn into an opportunity to learn and grow. At these times it may be helpful to take walks outdoors and to try to appreciate the positive aspects of your life.

References

Davis, M., E.R. Eshelman, and M. McKay. 1995. The relaxation and stress reduction workbook. Oakland, CA New Harbinger Publications, Inc.

International Stress Management Association. Calm down. Accessed June 1, 2002. http://www.stress-management-isma.org/relax.html

Rose Men's health Resource. How to fight and conquer stress. Accessed June 14, 2002. http://www.coolware.com/health/medical_reporter/stress.html

Robinson, Jerry. 1982.Stress and How to Live With It. Cheryl Tevis (ed.). Des Moines: Meredith Corporation.

Publications in the Stress Management Series

For more information see your county Extension Agent and related publications in the Stress Management series:


Footnotes

1. This document is FCS2080, one of a series of the Family Youth and Community Sciences Department, Florida Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida. Original publication date February 27, 2003. Revised May 11, 2006. Visit the EDIS Web Site at http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu.

2. Joe Pergola, extension agent IV, Hillsborough County, Sefner, and Suzanna Smith, associate professor, Human Development, Department of Family, Youth and Community Sciences, Florida Cooperative Extension Service, IFAS, University of Florida, Gainesville FL 32611.


The Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (IFAS) is an Equal Opportunity Institution authorized to provide research, educational information and other services only to individuals and institutions that function with non-discrimination with respect to race, creed, color, religion, age, disability, sex, sexual orientation, marital status, national origin, political opinions or affiliations. For more information on obtaining other extension publications, contact your county Cooperative Extension service.

U.S. Department of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service, University of Florida, IFAS, Florida A. & M. University Cooperative Extension Program, and Boards of County Commissioners Cooperating. Larry Arrington, Dean.



Copyright Information

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