"We’re all stressed. Stress is part of 21st-century life. It’s part of being an adult..."

in #stress7 years ago

Really?

 "We’re all stressed.Stress is part of 21st-century life. It’s part of being an adult. "

This quote is from this article.

I would say that is seriously misunderstands what stress is. Stress is not new, and the stress response was not originally dysfunctional. In days gone by, a passing and hungry sabre tooth tiger might happen across a lovely little snack in you!

Your automatic response would be what we now call the stress response. It worked (if it did) because the threat you were facing needed a physical response, was short term and not too often repeated. The stress response gears you for physical action at the expense of longer term health, but then if you avoid getting eaten the system resets to look after the longer term.

It was a Good Thing...

In today's world the factors that trigger the stress response are not so usually physical, but psychological - a bad boss, a queue on the way to work, a computer that is tooooooooo slow. 

And the stressors come thick and fast. 

That is the 21st century difference.

When the system does not get a chance to reset back to normal functioning our long term health becomes affected. 

And as we know it's a growing problem.

I suggest the answer is two fold.

First we need to become much better at recognising what is a threat (and thus rightly triggering the stress response) and what is not. Being stuck in a queue on our journey may well be inconvenient but it is not usually a threat to our life.

Second, we need step up and be influencers who shape our societies and make them into environments that actually nurture us rather than have us as service drones for vested interests. 

We are creating he world we live in, either actively or by our tacit acceptance of the status quo.

And the status quo sucks (apologies to the band) because it is a largely unconscious acting out of greed and ignorance.

It does not have to be this way. We cannot have whatever we want but we can work towards creating it.


Sort:  

I tell people, "Grow some cannabis. Get off your xxx addiction. (usually opiates or alcohol..)
or
"Find a farmer in your area, negotiate a medicinal price and ask for the leaves and flowers usually thrown away; this makes the best medicine to cure your mother's cancer (of any type really)."

Response: "But I can't, it's illegal in my country, yaha yada."

This is where I get stressed, and my voice changes a bit:

"Then do it anyway, and work to get your laws changed. It's called Civil Disobedience; there is a proud tradition. Besides, you are going to be very discreet and not get caught."