How to Manage Stress
Whenever
we look back on the past, our minds have a tendency to cast things in a warm,
rosy glow – our memories invariably focus on the good parts and gloss over the
bad. Which is why, when those who are removed a few years from their college
days reminisce about that time, all they typically remember are the parties,
the girls, the spring breaks, and so on.
What
they forget…is the stress.
The
stress of both holding down a job and being a student, the stress of stretching
a meager budget each month, the stress of breaking up with someone you thought
you’d spend your life with, the stress of fighting with a roommate who was once
your best friend and is now your sworn enemy, and of course, the stress of
cranking out a 20-page research paper and struggling to remember chemistry
formulas on your final exams.
Make
no mistake about it: the life of a young man is often quite glorious and free,
but there will also be times when you feel utterly overwhelmed. Sure, a lot of
adults tend to scoff at a young man’s stress — “You think you’re busy now? Wait
until you have a wife, three kids, and a full-time job!” And these men are
right, in a way – your total amount of stress will tend to increase as you age
and take on more responsibilities, and you’ll probably look back on college and
think, “What the heck was I so worried about?” But it’s all relative, isn’t it?
The stress of a young man is both unique (I wouldn’t trade the pressure of a
real job for being tested on my ability to regurgitate information again) and
new – you haven’t yet accumulated the life experiences that will help you see
that what feels like the end of the world now, is just another bump in the
road.
All
of which is to say, the stress you will experience after leaving home is real, and
learning how to deal with it is one of the most important skills a young man
can master. Since it is true that your stress will likely increase with age,
learning how to manage it now will prepare you to live happily and confidently
not just into your 20s, but for the rest of your life as well.
With
that truth in mind, today we take you through a comprehensive primer designed
to help you understand what stress is, how it can negatively affect both body
and mind, and how you can easily and effectively manage it.
What is Stress?
Stress
is your body’s reaction to circumstances in which it feels it needs more
strength, stamina, and alertness in order to survive and thrive. Any perceived challenge or
threat to your well-being can induce a stress response. This response signals
your nervous system to release the hormones adrenaline, noradrenaline, and
cortisol into your bloodstream, which gets you revved up and ready for action:
your heart rate, blood pressure, sweating, and breathing increase, your blood
vessels dilate to speed blood flow to your muscles, your pupils dilate to
enhance your vision, and your liver releases stored glucose for your body to
use as energy. In primitive times, this so-called “fight or flight” response
instantly primed your body to deal with danger.
Thus,
while many people view stress as an exclusively bad thing, it can in fact be
either positive or negative. In the face of an immediate challenge — a
job interview, a big presentation, a difficult test – the stress response puts
you on your toes and can improve your performance and ability to handle the
pressure. It also lends excitement to life; when you feel nervous butterflies
before asking a girl out, or getting on a roller coaster, that’s stress too. It
might seem like a 100% stress-free life would be incredible, but after a while,
a state of perpetual calm would begin to feel flat, stale, and boring (at least
for those of us who have not achieved total Zen!).
Stress
only becomes a problem in the face of two main factors. The first is
stress overload. The amount of stress you feel given a certain set of
circumstances is directly proportional to the degree in which you feel your
skills and resources (including time) are adequate in addressing them. This
state of competence can be based on either reality or one’s own optimistically
or pessimistically rendered self-assessment. A man who enjoys and is talented
at public speaking will feel much less stress before making a presentation than
a man who is shy and speaks awkwardly; a man who completes an assignment over
the course of a week will feel much less stressed than the man who waits to
work on it until the night before; a man who is much less confident in dating
women and what he has to offer them, will feel much more devastated when a girl
dumps him than a man who has little doubt he’ll soon meet someone else. Instead
of getting us revved up for action, stress that seems too big to handle can
feel crushing, leaving us feeling overwhelmed and too paralyzed to do anything
at all.
The
second instance stress becomes a problem is when the set of circumstances
causing it becomes chronic. The stress response was originally designed to help
humans deal with immediate threats and challenges – after the adrenaline
rush, our nervous systems quickly returned to stand-by mode in preparation for
the next challenge. Saber-toothed tiger! Throw spear! Tiger dead! Whoo,
relax time. Me go back to making cave paintings. But in modern times, our
stressors can go on and on and on. As much as we might like to, we can’t spear
our annoying roommate or co-worker. Instead, we have to put up with him day
after day. And day after day, this chronic stress causes our bodies to dump out
low levels of stress hormones. Unfortunately, a steady of dose of something
that was supposed to be rare and fleeting can make us physically and
emotionally sick.
The Damaging Effects of Too Much Stress
Too
much stress can do a number on both your body and mind, causing everything from
diarrhea and constipation, to tension headaches and hair loss. Below we
describe more of the deleterious effects of stress:
Weight
gain. At
the height of your stress response, you will likely experience a decreased
appetite. But once the stress starts to wane, the cortisol that was released
into your bloodstream may spur you to eat sugary, carbohydrate-rich foods. This
made sense back in primitive times: the fight or flight response usually
preceded a bout of physical exertion (get that mammoth!), and after the stress
had passed, it was time to replenish your body. These days, when you may
experience the stress response while remaining chained to your desk, gobbling
down donuts as you descend from your stress peak will only lead to a
primordial-sized gut.
Decreased
libido and erectile dysfunction. Cortisol also decreases testosterone
production, which in turn can depress a man’s libido and cause erectile
dysfunction. If you want to enjoy a healthy sex drive in adulthood, you’ll need
to get a handle on your stress today.
Increased
blood pressure. Cortisol,
along with the other hormones that are released when we’re stressed, causes our
hearts to beat faster and constrict our blood vessels in order to prime our
bodies for fight or flight. Fine in the short term, but prolonged stress can
lead to hypertension, and all its attending health problems.
Insomnia. With cortisol still
pumping through your veins, even after the height of a stressful experience has
passed, you may find yourself still too revved up to sleep. This inability to
get some shuteye is often compounded by other factors that frequently attend
stressful times — caffeine consumption, and racing, worried thoughts.
Hyper-emotionality. When you’re stressed and your willpower is depleted, you become more
emotional. Hyper-emotionality doesn’t necessarily mean that you’ll
become a blubbering mess at a drop of the hat, though that is a common response
of individuals who are over-stressed. Rather it means that all your
emotions – sadness, anger, even happiness — are in overdrive. With
the rational part of your brain no longer in control, you’re
more susceptible to outbursts of all kinds.
Social
isolation. A
common response to stress is to retreat to our “bunker” and isolate ourselves
from other people. As we’ll discuss further down, while it’s certainly okay to
get some alone time when you’re feeling stressed, too much isolation can
actually contribute to your anxiety.
Poor
concentration and memory. While some stress can make us more mentally nimble,
chronic stress depletes our willpower and turns us into dolts. Studies show
that individuals who experience stress over a long period of
time demonstrate poorer concentration, decreased memory,
and a reduced decision making capacity.
Fatigue. According to the American
Psychological Association, 25% of men report experiencing physical
and mental fatigue several times a week. Stress is one of the biggest
contributors to that tuckered out condition. Physical tension and mental worry,
along with a diminishment in testosterone, drains our bodies and makes us feel
sluggish and tired.
Weakened
immune system.
You may have heard that all stress is bad for your immune system, but recent studies have shown that short bursts of stress can
actually boost it. When your mind senses a coming crisis, stress hormones
muster immune cells to potential “battlefields” in the body — tissues, organs,
and mucous membranes that are particularly sensitive to infection. In primitive
times, the fight of flight response was typically triggered in situations like
hunting or combat where physical wounds were a likely outcome, and these
immunity “soldiers” stood at the ready to stave off infection and heal these
wounds as soon as they formed. But, once again, a response that was beneficial
a thousand years ago has been hijacked by the ongoing stress of modern life.
The constant drilling of your immunity troops in preparation for a non-existent
emergency eventually wearies and weakens them, leaving you vulnerable to
infections and inflammation.
Depression. Chronic stress reduces
neurotransmitters in the brain like serotonin and dopamine, which help regulate
things like appetite, energy, and sleep, in addition to balancing our moods and
contributing to our sense of well-being. A diminishment of these
neurotransmitters can cause depression directly, but can lead to it indirectly
as well by creating a circular pattern of negative behavior. You have trouble
sleeping, so you don’t feel like exercising in the morning, which makes you
feel more stressed out, so you eat more, which makes you feel more sluggish,
which makes you not want to go out and socialize…and on the circle spirals,
potentially into depression.
Increased
alcohol consumption, smoking, and drug use. Men tend to deal with
stress by looking for an escape from it. Oftentimes, that escape is alcohol,
smoking, and drugs. While many a well-balanced man won’t experience any
ill-effects from a nightcap to take the edge off a stressful day, it becomes a
problem when one glass turns to four. Heavy alcohol or drug use can lead to a
whole host of relationship and health problems, and does nothing to mitigate
the source of the stress — it may actually exacerbate it.
How to Manage Stress Effectively
Reading
over all those stress-induced maladies may have left you feeling stressed about
being stressed! But don’t worry: most stress is very manageable as long as you
commit to doing the small, daily maintenance tasks that will keep your stress
from reaching the point where it begins to feel crushing.
As
we mentioned above in the “What is Stress?” section, negative stress is
generally the result of two factors: 1) Not feeling like our skills, talents,
and resources (including time) are adequate to handle a threat or challenge,
and 2) Chronic stress-producing circumstances that last for days, weeks, even
years.
Thus,
when it comes to managing stress, you need to take a double-pronged approach
that includes preventing these factors from occurring in the first place, and
learning how to mitigate them when prevention is impossible.
Develop
your resiliency. A
huge part of dealing with stress has nothing to do with the actual stressor,
but how you handle that stressor. A situation one man navigates with
confident ease can cause another man to completely fall apart. Thus, the
foundational block in your ability to manage stress is developing the trait of
resiliency. Being resilient encompasses the way in which you both act
and react in the world — your ability to both quickly bounce back from
challenges and trials and to face the world head-on with courage and
confidence. Without a resilient attitude and approach to life, all of the
stress-reducing methods below amount to rearranging the deck chairs on the
Titanic.
The
path to developing resilience cannot be explained in just a few sentences.
Luckily, a couple of years ago, we wrote a comprehensive, 7-part series on the
subject. It includes both a conceptual framework to help you understand the
nature of resilience as well as practical methods to develop the trait. I
really believe it’s a must-read for a man of any age. You
can find the series here, and we also put together the articles in an ebook that includes worksheets as well. When it
comes to dealing with stress, the articles on Avoiding Learned Helplessness and Changing Your
Explanatory Style, Taking Control of Your Life, and How to Quit Catastrophizing will be most applicable
and helpful.
Exercise. If you take only one
stress-reducing strategy from this list, let it be this: make exercise a
regular habit. Researchers have found that exercise is just as effective as
antidepressants in treating clinical depression and increases the levels of endocannabinoid molecules in our blood, the same
endocannabinoids that are responsible for the calming pleasure produced by the
consumption of marijuana.
Exercise
not only treats stress, it may also help prevent it as well; preliminary studies are beginning to show that the small amount
of physical and mental stress you experience when you exercise acts sort of
like an inoculation to high-stress events later, creating brain cells
that are better able to deal with anxiety, or in other words, a more
stress-resistant brain. If you need help in starting a regular exercise
routine, we offered some tips on the subject last week.
To
make your exercise doubly-effective, do your workout outside, for the reasons
we’ll explain next.
Get
out in nature. In nature, body and mind get a chance to rejuvenate. In a
study
done in Japan, researchers found that after a 20-minute walk in the forest,
participants had “lower concentrations of cortisol, lower pulse rate, lower
blood pressure, greater parasympathetic nerve activity, and lower sympathetic
nerve activity” than subjects who spent time in the city. In layman’s terms?
Walking in the woods mellows you out. In a follow-up study, time spent in nature increased feelings of
vigor and decreased the feelings of anger, anxiety, and depression.
So
instead of spending every Saturday sacked out on the couch watching football,
start making time for regular hikes in the woods. Your inner-Thoreau will thank
you.
Meditate.
Numerous
studies have shown that simple mindfulness meditation can reduce and
even eliminate many of the negative physiological and psychological
symptoms of chronic stress. While you’re meditating, blood pressure normalizes,
breathing and heart rate slows, and your adrenal glands produce less
cortisol. Participants in meditation studies often report lower anxiety, worry,
and tension levels. Moreover, regular meditation actually rewires your brain
and makes you more resilient in the face of stress.
Never
meditated? Just read our quick and handy how-to guide to get started. The beauty of it is that
you don’t even have to meditate that long to get the benefits. Just 20 minutes
a day will do the trick, and you’ll start noticing the benefits in just a few
weeks.
Make
a list of what’s stressing you out. Sometimes when we have a bunch of things
that are worrying us and a long list of things to do, all of these stressors swirl
together in a big cloud of restlessness and agitation. We feel overwhelmed, but
the cloud makes it hard for us to even articulate exactly why. When this
happens, take some time to make a list of everything you’re worried about.
Offloading them from your brain to paper will help your cranium to relax. This
is, in fact, one of the things Dwight D. Eisenhower did to relieve his
stress
when the burden of deciding when to launch D-Day grew crushingly heavy.
Now,
make an action/to-do list by looking at each item on your worry list. Write
down small, specific, immediate things you can do to take care of each
stressor.
Get
plenty of sleep. Sleep and stress create somewhat of a Catch-22 problem.
Our bodies and minds need sleep to help manage and cope with stress, but stress
can oftentimes prevent us from getting the sleep we need! While we could devote
an entire post to how to improve your slumber, here are a few quick things you
can do to get the best night’s sleep possible, even when you’re feeling tense:
- Meditate twenty minutes before hitting the sack to calm and relax your mind and body.
- Write down all your worries before getting into bed so you’re not thinking about them while you’re trying to get to sleep. As we just mentioned, this is an effective stress-reducing tactic anytime, but it’s particularly effective right before bed.
- Turn off the computer and TV an hour before going to bed. The light from electronic screens suppresses the body’s natural melatonin production, a hormone which helps lull you into sleep.
- Speaking of melatonin, consider taking a melatonin supplement right before going to bed. It can help you relax and get to sleep quicker (and based on my experience, have crazy dreams).
- Make sure your room is nice and cool. Studies show the optimal temperature for sleep is somewhere between 60 to 68 degrees (brrrr!). If you don’t want to run the A/C that low all night, get a fan, keep your sleepwear light (or nonexistent), and don’t use heavy blankets or comforters.
- Play some white noise. White noise blocks distracting sounds as well as provides a relaxing sound that will soothe you into sleep. This can particularly help if you have night owl roommates who stay up and make noise after you’ve turned in, or if you live in the heart of a noisy city. A desktop fan is a great white noise source. Or you can download white noise soundtracks to play while you’re sleeping. I used this free white noise generator while in law school for my power naps, speaking of which…
Take
a nap. The simple nap is a powerful thing that offers a whole host
of amazing benefits, including increased alertness, a boost in your learning
and working memory, and greater creativity. It’s also a potent stress-fighter:
napping releases growth hormones and serotonin, which balances your cortisol,
soothes your stabbiness, and leaves you feeling content and rejuvenated.
Reduce caffeine consumption. Caffeine increases
cortisol and adrenaline production in your body, which may make you feel
better in the short-term, but will increase your jagged, stressed-out feeling
in the long-term. Cut back on caffeine and try to avoid it after 2PM to ensure
you get a good night’s sleep.
Stick
to a routine. The
more out of control you feel, the more stressed out you’ll be. While we can’t
control everything that happens to us during the day, by taking charge of the
things we can control, we can greatly reduce our anxiety. One way to
feel more in control of your life is by establishing and sticking to routines:
exercise routines, morning and evening routines, work routines. Anything
you do frequently, try to make it routine. The more your mind knows what to
expect next, the more calm and confident it will feel.
Plan
your week. Much
of the stress I experienced in college was created because I didn’t manage my
time well. I’d forget due dates, wait until the last minute to write a paper,
and schedule appointments that conflicted with other obligations. When I
started planning my week, things markedly improved. Having a weekly plan will ensure you don’t forget important stuff
or overextend your commitments like I did. Moreover, having a plan makes you
feel in control, which as we just discussed, keeps stress at bay.
Get
social. As
I mentioned above, a common response to stress (especially for us men) is to
become a hermit. I’m that way. Sometimes I just need to be alone so I can sort
through stuff. While it’s perfectly fine and healthy to get some alone time
when you’re stressed, if you’re still feeling frazzled after some solitude,
call up a buddy or two to hang out. Studies show that social interaction does
wonders for reducing stress. Our bodies release anti-stress, feel-good hormones
like oxytocin when we’re around people who care for us. Plus, friends and
family can offer some much needed advice and perspective that can help you
manage and sort through whatever’s burdening you; while you should strive to be self-reliant as much as possible,
there’s no shame in calling up mom and dad when you’ve reached the end of your
rope.
One
bird at a time. I
read a book a few years ago about writing by Anne Lamont that had some advice
that I think is applicable to managing stress effectively. From the book Bird by Bird:
“Thirty
years ago my older brother, who was ten years old at the time, was trying to
get a report on birds written that he’d had three months to write. [It] was due
the next day. We were out at our family cabin in Bolinas, and he was at the
kitchen table close to tears, surrounded by binder paper and pencils and
unopened books on birds, immobilized by the hugeness of the task ahead. Then my
father sat down beside him, put his arm around my brother’s shoulder, and said.
‘Bird by bird, buddy. Just take it bird by bird.’”
When
you’re feeling overwhelmed and stressed by the things that are piling up, just
take them “one bird at a time.” Instead of focusing on the enormity of
everything you have to do, break things up into their component parts and do
one thing at a time until you’re done. Concentrate on simply putting one foot
in front of the other.
It
will get done and over with. Something that helps me when I’m stressed
out to the point where it feels like the world is going to end, is simply to
tell myself, “It will get done and will be over with.” Maybe you’ll have to
stay up all night to finish it, maybe what you turn in won’t be as good as it
could have been, but regardless of what happens, that due date or scheduled
meeting will come and go, you’ll accept the consequences, and life will move
on. You can look at the clock, and think “Okay, at 3:00 pm tomorrow, this will
be resolved one way or another.” For whatever reason, thinking this helps me
settle down and get going on whatever I can do.
Start
saying “NO.” A
big source of stress in my life has been over-committing myself. I’d
say “yes” to just about anything because, 1) I’m sort of a people pleaser, and
2) I didn’t want to miss out on any opportunity that might further my
goals. After enduring the stress of managing an overbooked schedule one time
too many, I’ve had to learn to say “no.” Don’t be like me. Don’t should on yourself, and learn how to say “no” early on in your adult life.
by
Brett & Kate McKay 120830
http://artofmanliness.com/2012/08/30/heading-out-on-your-own-day-30-how-to-manage-stress
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