When we pursue happiness, it eludes you. However, when you recognise that happiness is the natural state of the soul, all you need is to eliminate all that comes between your happiness and you.
The word 'stress'
is defined by the Oxford Dictionary as "a state of affair involving
demand on physical or mental energy". A condition or circumstance
(not always adverse), which can disturb the normal physical and mental
health of an individual. In medical parlance 'stress' is defined as a
perturbation of the body's homeostasis. This demand on mind-body occurs
when it tries to cope with incessant changes in life. A 'stress' condition
seems 'relative' in nature. Extreme stress conditions, psychologists say,
are detrimental to human health but in moderation stress is normal and,
in many cases, proves useful. Stress, nonetheless, is synonymous with
negative conditions. Today, with the rapid diversification of human activity,
we come face to face with numerous causes
of stress and the symptoms
of stress and depression.
At one point or the other everybody suffers from stress. Relationship
demands, physical as well as mental health problems, pressure at workplaces,
traffic snarls, meeting deadlines, growing-up tensionsall of these
conditions and situations are valid causes of stress. People have their
own methods of stress management. In some people, stress-induced adverse
feelings and anxieties tend to persist and intensify. Learning to understand
and master stress management techniques can help prevent the counter effects
of this urban malaise.
"Nothing gives one person so much advantage over another as to
remain always cool and unruffled under all circumstances."
Thomas Jefferson
In a challenging situation the brain prepares the body for defensive
actionthe fight or flight response by releasing stress hormones,
namely, cortisone and adrenaline. These hormones raise the blood pressure
and the body prepares to react to the situation. With a concrete defensive
action (fight response) the stress hormones in the blood get used up,
entailing reduced stress effects and symptoms of anxiety.
When we fail to counter a stress situation (flight response) the hormones
and chemicals remain unreleased in the blood stream for a long period
of time. It results in stress related physical symptoms such as tense
muscles, unfocused anxiety, dizziness and rapid heartbeats. We all encounter
various stressors (causes of stress) in everyday life, which can accumulate,
if not released. Subsequently, it compels the mind and body to be in an
almost constant alarm-state in preparation to fight or flee. This state
of accumulated stress can increase the risk of both acute and chronic
psychosomatic illnesses and weaken the immune system of the human body.
Stress
can cause headaches, irritable bowel syndrome, eating disorder, allergies,
insomnia, backaches, frequent cold and fatigue to diseases such as hypertension,
asthma, diabetes, heart ailments and even cancer. In fact, Sanjay Chugh,
a leading Indian psychologist, says that 70 per cent to 90 per cent of
adults visit primary care physicians for stress-related problems. Scary
enough. But where do we err?
Just about everybodymen, women, children and even fetusessuffer
from stress. Relationship demands, chronic health problems, pressure at
workplaces, traffic snarls, meeting deadlines, growing-up tensions or
a sudden bearish trend in the bourse can trigger stress conditions. People
react to it in their own ways. In some people, stress-induced adverse
feelings and anxieties tend to persist and intensify. Learning to understand
and manage stress can prevent the counter effects of stress.
Methods of coping with stress are aplenty. The most significant or sensible
way out is a change in lifestyle. Relaxation techniques such as meditation,
physical exercises, listening to soothing music,
deep breathing, various natural
and alternative methods, personal growth techniques, visualization
and massage
are some of the most effective of the known non-invasive stress busters.
The words 'positive' and 'stress' may not often go together. But, there
are innumerable instances of athletes rising to the challenge of stress
and achieving the unachievable, scientists stressing themselves out over
a point to bring into light the most unthinkable secrets of the phenomenal
world, and likewise a painter, a composer or a writer producing the best
paintings, the most lilting of tunes or the most appealing piece of writing
by pushing themselves to the limit. Psychologists second the opinion that
some 'stress' situations can actually boost our inner
potential and can be creatively helpful. Sudha Chandran, an Indian
danseus, lost both of her legs in an accident. But, the physical and social
inadequacies gave her more impetus to carry on with her dance performances
with the help of prosthetic legs rather than deter her spirits.
Experts tell us that stress, in moderate doses, are necessary in our life.
Stress responses are one of our body's best defense systems against outer
and inner dangers. In a risky situation (in case of accidents or a sudden
attack on life et al), body releases stress hormones that instantly make
us more alert and our senses become more focused. The body is also prepared
to act with increased strength and speed in a pressure situation. It is
supposed to keep us sharp and ready for action.
Research suggests that stress can actually increase our performance. Instead
of wilting under stress, one can use it as an impetus to achieve success.
Stress can stimulate one's faculties to delve deep into and discover one's
true potential. Under stress the brain is emotionally and biochemically
stimulated to sharpen its performance.
A working
class mother in down town California, Erin Brokovich, accomplished an
extraordinary feat in the 1990s when she took up a challenge against the
giant industrial house Pacific Gas & Electric. The unit was polluting
the drinking water of the area with chromium effluents. Once into it,
Brockovich had to work under tremendous stress taking on the bigwigs of
the society. By her own account, she had to study as many as 120 research
articles to find if chromium 6 was carcinogenic. Going from door to door,
Erin signed up over 600 plaintiffs, and with attorney Ed Masry went on
to receive the largest court settlement, for the town people, ever paid
in a direct action lawsuit in the U.S. history$333 million. It's
an example of an ordinary individual triumphing over insurmountable odds
under pressure. If handled positively stress can induce people to discover
their inherent talents.
Stress
is, perhaps, necessary to occasionally clear cobwebs from our thinking.
If approached positively, stress can help us evolve as a person by letting
go of unwanted thoughts and principle in our life. Very often, at various
crossroads of life, stress may remind you of the transitory nature of
your experiences, and may prod you to look for the true happiness of life.
Stress has existed throughout the evolution. About 4 billion years ago,
violent collision of rock and ice along with dust and gas, led to the
formation of a new planet. The planet survive more than 100 million
years of meltdown to give birth to microscopic life . These first organisms
endured the harshest of conditionslack of oxygen, exposure to
sun's UV rays and other inhospitable elements, to hang on to their dear
life. Roughly 300,000 years ago, the Neanderthals learnt to use fire
in a controlled way, to survive the Glacial Age. And around 30,000 years,
Homo sapiens with their dominant gene constitutions and better coping
skills, won the game of survival. Each step of evolution a test of survival,
and survival, a matter of coping with the stress of changing conditions.
Millions
of trials and errors in the life process have brought men to this stage.
Coping with events to survive has led men to invent extraordinary technologies,
beginning with a piece of sharpened stone.
From
the viewpoint of microevolution, stress induction of transpositions is
a powerful factor, generating new genetic variations in populations under
stressful environmental conditions. Passing through a 'bottleneck', a
population can rapidly and significantly alters its population norm and
become the founder of new, evolved forms.
Gene
transposition through Transposable Elements (TE)'jumping genes',
is a major source of genetic change, including the creation of novel genes,
the alteration of gene expression in development, and the genesis of major
genomic rearrangements. In a research on 'the significance of responses
of the genome to challenges,' the Nobel Prize winning scientist Barbara
McClintock, characterized these genetic phenomena as 'genomic shock'.This
occurs due to recombinational events between TE insertions (high and low
insertion polymorphism) and host genome. But, as a rule TEs remain immobilized
until some stress factor (temperature, irradiation, DNA damage, the introduction
of foreign chromatin, viruses, etc.) activates their elements.
The
moral remains that we can work a stress condition to our advantage or
protect ourselves from its untoward follow-throughs subject to how we
handle a stress situation. The choice is between becoming a slave to the
stressful situations of life or using them to our advantage.