High workloads, major life changes, job insecurity, conflict with family members, financial instability and multiple other factors can be a source of stress for you. Poor lifestyle choices, negative thinking patterns or a tendency to worry excessively can exacerbate these stressors making it difficult to lead a happy and healthy life.
Under stress, the body's nervous system activates, leading to a state of heightened arousal. This can result in racing thoughts, making it difficult to quiet the mind and focus on the present moment. Left unhandled, stress can evoke a sense of loss of control, making you feel helpless or powerless. It can feed into your overthinking tendency, creating a vicious cycle that's hard to break.
You can't avoid stress, but you can certainly learn to manage it well. To do this, you need to apply the right strategies by taking charge and acting before it's too late.
You can't stop the waves, but you can learn to surf.
― Jon Kabat-Zinn
You can respond to any life stress in four possible ways:
You may let stress into your life without realizing that you have a choice in deciding what you let in and what you leave out.
While you can't control everything, a part of your stress is voluntary as you fail to recognize people, situations, or activities that trigger stress and refuse to walk away from them. Avoiding stress does not mean ignoring problems or running away from responsibilities. It's learning to say no to people, situations or problems that demand too much of your mental energy and are either unnecessary or harmful.
For example:
Even if you cannot change all the people around you, you can change the people you choose to be around. Life is too short to waste your time on people who don’t respect, appreciate, and value you. Spend your life with people who make you smile, laugh, and feel loved.
― Roy T. Bennett
Minimize exposure to unnecessary stressors in your life:
Don’t allow stress to enter your life for things within your control. Exercise your power. Decide. Make a conscious choice.
If you can't avoid the situation, the next step is to try to change it in a way that makes it more bearable and less taxing for you. This often involves clearly stating what you want and communicating your needs upfront or proactively taking steps to minimize overwhelming situations―set boundaries, delegate tasks, or seek support from others.
For example:
Boundaries help us keep the good in and the bad out. Setting boundaries inevitably involves taking responsibility for your choices. You are the one who makes them. You are the one who must live with their consequences. And you are the one who may be keeping yourself from making the choices you could be happy with.
― Henry Cloud
Alter the situation to reduce the stressor and lessen their impact:
It’s impossible to avoid all stress inducing situations, but you can minimize their impact by consciously planning and communicating your expectations in a manner that they work in your favor instead of against you.
When you can't avoid or alter the stressful situation, adapting and adjusting your response to it can do the trick. This involves looking at the situation through a different lens―one that treats challenge as an opportunity―by changing your perspective, expanding your mindset and realigning your expectations. Adapting to the situation this way changes the way you approach it. Instead of dwelling on the problem, you think about alternative ways to respond that may be more constructive or beneficial.
For example:
Your stress mindset shapes everything from the emotions you feel during a stressful situation to the way you cope with stressful events. That, in turn, can determine whether you thrive under stress or end up burned out and depressed. The good news is, even if you are firmly convinced that stress is harmful, you can still cultivate a mindset that helps you thrive.
― Kelly McGonigal
Adapt to the situation by changing your perspective:
When dealing with stress, your mindset determines how you process the things around you and how you act. Negative mindset can trigger defeatist behavior making you lose confidence and hope in your skills and abilities while a positive mindset can enable you to find solutions to even the most difficult setbacks and challenges. Manage stress by viewing things differently.
When you can't avoid, alter or adapt to a situation, it's wise to accept that it's simply beyond your control and trying to change it will lead to a dead-end. Acceptance does not mean agreeing with what's happening or denying how you feel about it. It's coming to terms with your emotions while acknowledging things you can't change so that you can focus on what you can.
For example:
Incredible change happens in your life when you decide to take control of what you do have power over instead of craving control over what you don't.
― Steve Maraboli
Embrace the reality that certain stressors are beyond your control:
Worrying about
Whenever you feel stressed out, answer these questions to manage stress effectively and feel in control of your life.
What's stressing you right now?
Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms—to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.
― Viktor E. Frankl
Don’t let the non-stop demands of work, home and other responsibilities keep you stressed, anxious and overwhelmed. Keep it in control by minimizing exposure, managing expectations, reframing the situation and accepting things you can’t change.
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