The American Psychological Association defines stress as “The physiological or psychological response to internal or external stressors. Stress involves changes affecting nearly every system of the body, influencing how people feel and behave.” Stress causes mind–body changes, contributes directly to psychological and physiological disorder and disease and affects mental and physical health, and reduces quality of life.
We are living in a time of unprecedented and prolonged stress, loss, and trauma worldwide and stress is a topic with which we are all intimately familiar. As workers in the healthcare industry at all levels, we are stressed, our patients are stressed….everybody seems to be stressed! After all, we have been called to cope with a pandemic, plus regular stressors, plus balancing life outside of work!
It is expected that managing stress can sometimes be challenging. Certainly it is a difficult balance to strike, but it is crucially important that we do. With so much happening and sometimes limited resources with which to respond, it is inevitable that many stressors are faced on a daily basis. Since stress can activate our autonomic nervous system’s sympathetic responses (like fight and flight), unmanaged stress can create significant mental and physical health symptoms. Here are three considerations for moving towards finding a new balance for managing and moving through your stress.
An important note on trauma. Remember that stress and trauma live on the same continuum—however, according to Jaime Marich, “traumatic experiences are always stressful, but stressors are not always traumatic...stress is not always harmful while trauma nearly always is.” So, it is important to also notice when your stress responses, like fight, fight and freeze, are getting in the way of your being able to live, laugh, love and do your work in a healthy way over an extended period of time. If this is something you are noticing in yourself, it is a great time to work with a professional to process through your stressors so you can get back to feeling empowered and well.
About the Author
References
American Psychological Association (n.d). Stress. Retrieved from https://dictionary.apa.org/stress
Nagoski, E. & Nagoski, A. (2021). Burnout: The Secret to Unlocking the Stress Cycle. Ballantine.
Marich, J. (n.d.) Can grief and loss be traumatic? Retrieved from https://www.gulfbend.org/poc/view_doc.php?type=doc&id=55728&cn=109