What is stress? We all feel it, we can’t escape it, but what is it actually and how does it affect us?
Stress is the physiological response to the perception of a real or imagined threat to your body or self. The key point here is perception. An external event is not necessarily inherently stressful – it is how we interpret the signals and how it is processed in our mind and translated into our body. The threat could be real (biking accident) but it could be imagined (an assumption that someone was mad at us). In either case – if we perceive the event as stressful, a cascade of patterned responses ensues. Adrenaline, cortisol and other stress hormones are released from your brain and permeate every cell in your body. Every cell has receptors for these powerful chemical messengers (hormones). When you “feel” stressed, your cells feel this stress. When you feel joy, your cells feel joy so to speak. The stress response activates the sympathetic response (flight or right) of the autonomic nervous system causing your heart rate, blood pressure to go up, blood more sticky, increases your blood sugar levels to prepare you for emergency action. This is the right response if there is an acute stressful event that requires you to take action (run away from the sabre tooth tiger). However, if we are chronically stressed, this adaptive stress response becomes maladaptive and it causes all kinds of problems on the body. Stress has been identified as a major contributor of many chronic diseases – heart disease, high blood dress, thyroid dysfunction, mood disorders etc.
We are an incredible complex and resilient organism. It never ceases to amaze me, how much stress, trauma and illness the body can handle, heal and triumph from. We need to pay attention to what our body is saying to us. The body communicates to us through symptoms. What is our body trying to say to us? It is telling us to slow down, to quit that job that we know we should done long ago but can’t quite make ourselves do it. The body will say “No’ – if we can’t say “No. Every symptom or illness should prompt an inquiry and reflection upon what is going on in our lives.
We are learning more and more that our choices we make each and every day contribute to our overall resilience to stress, dysfunction and illness. Nourishing our bodies with nutrient dense, whole foods provide us with all the co-factors and molecules to ensure our systems are running well and have extra capacity. Keeping our bodies strong, flexible, supple ensures that energy is flowing freely through our systems and stress is not getting trapped. Ensuring consistent, restorative sleep is vital. Learning how to breath – deeply and slowly have profound effects on our stress response. Do Yoga – it is the best combination of movement, breath and meditation. Understand our thinking patterns and begin to be aware of how we often make erroneous assumptions about situations and how this causes us stress. Once we become more conscious and mindful about our perception and responses, we can then begin to re-pattern and re-wire how we respond.
Resilience is about having extra functional capacity so that we can handle increased stress without losing function. We can all live healthy, happier lives once we begin to understand and shift how we perceive and respond to stress
In Health,
Dr. Lawrence Cheng