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What is stress?
A lot of
research has been conducted
into stress over the last
hundred years. Some of the
theories behind it are now
settled and accepted; others
are still being researched
and debated. During this
time, there seems to have
been something approaching
open warfare between
competing theories and
definitions: Views have been
passionately held and
aggressively defended.
What
complicates this is that
intuitively we all feel that
we know what stress is, as
it is something we have all
experienced. A definition
should therefore be
obvious…except that it is
not.
Definitions |
Hans Selye was
one of the founding fathers of
stress research. His view in 1956
was that “stress is not necessarily
something bad – it all depends on
how you take it. The stress of
exhilarating, creative successful
work is beneficial, while that of
failure, humiliation or infection is
detrimental.” Selye believed that
the biochemical effects of stress
would be experienced irrespective of
whether the situation was positive
or negative.
Since then, a
great deal of further research has
been conducted, and ideas have moved
on. Stress is now viewed as a "bad
thing", with a range of harmful
biochemical and long-term effects.
These effects have rarely been
observed in positive situations.
The most
commonly accepted definition of
stress (mainly attributed to Richard
S Lazarus) is that stress is
a condition or feeling experienced
when a person perceives that
“demands exceed the personal and
social resources the individual is
able to mobilize.”
This is the main
definition used by this section of
Mind Tools, although we also
recognize that there is an
intertwined instinctive stress
response to unexpected events. The
stress response inside us is
therefore part instinct and part to
do with the way we think.
Fight-or-Flight
Some of the early research on stress
(conducted by Walter Cannon in 1932)
established the existence of the
well-known “fight-or-flight”
response. His work showed that when
an organism experiences a shock or
perceives a threat, it quickly
releases hormones that help it to
survive.
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In
humans, as in other animals,
these hormones help us to
run faster and fight harder.
They increase heart rate and
blood pressure, delivering
more oxygen and blood sugar
to power important muscles.
They increase sweating in an
effort to cool these
muscles, and help them stay
efficient. They divert blood
away from the skin to the
core of our bodies, reducing
blood loss if we are
damaged. As well as this,
these hormones focus our
attention on the threat, to
the exclusion of everything
else. All of this
significantly improves our
ability to survive
life-threatening events.
Not only
life-threatening events
trigger this reaction: We
experience it almost any
time we come across
something unexpected or
something that frustrates
our goals. When the threat
is small, our response is
small and we often do not
notice it among the many
other distractions of a
stressful situation. |
Unfortunately,
this mobilization of the body for
survival also has negative
consequences. In this state, we are
excitable, anxious, jumpy and
irritable. This actually reduces our
ability to work effectively with
other people. With trembling and a
pounding heart, we can find it
difficult to execute precise,
controlled skills. The intensity of
our focus on survival interferes
with our ability to make fine
judgments by drawing information
from many sources. We find ourselves
more accident-prone and less able to
make good decisions.
There are very
few situations in modern working
life where this response is useful.
Most situations benefit from a calm,
rational, controlled and socially
sensitive approach.
In the short
term, we need to keep this
fight-or-flight response under
control to be effective in our jobs.
In the long term we need to keep it
under control to avoid problems of
poor health and burnout. |