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How Stress Affects the Body©
Excerpts from Re-Defining Stress
to Prevent Disease

By
Steve Jaffe

To understand how stress affects the body, one has to be familiar with the three types of stress that bombards the mind and body: Acute, episodic, and chronic. Acute stress is the most common form of stress. It comes from demands and pressures that are connected to the past and a perceived future. Episodic stress is an elevated form of acute stress. People suffering this form of stress are in chaos and crisis a majority of their daily lives. Chronic stress usually originates from traumatic early childhood experiences that become painfully internalized and remain painful and with the person into adulthood (Miller & Smith, 1997).

Acute stress can be thrilling and exciting in small doses. This form of stress does not have enough time to do the extensive damage associated with long-term stress (Miller & Smith, 1997). Some symptoms are: anger, irritability, anxiety, depression, muscular problems, back pain, jaw pain, stomach and bowel problems, heartburn, acid stomach, flatulence, diarrhea, constipation, elevated blood pressure, rapid heart beat, sweaty palms, heart palpitations, dizziness, migraine headaches, cold hands or feet, shortness of breath and chest pain (Miller & Smith, 1997).

Episodic acute stress is found in people who suffer acute stress frequently (Miller & Smith, 1997). They are people who are ceaseless worriers. The cardiac prone Type-A personality fits into this category. Symptoms of episodic acute stress are: episodes of extended arousal, persistent tension headaches, migraines, hypertension, chest pain and heart disease.

Chronic stress, unlike acute and episodic, is more serious and requires immediate intervention. This form of stress wears away at people day after day. Chronic stress is when a person never sees a way out of a desolate situation (Miller & Smith, 1997). This unrelenting demand on the body eventually puts a person in a situation that prevents them from seeing a light at the end of the tunnel. In most chronic stress situations all avenues of hope appear eliminated (Miller & Smith, 1997). The one distinguishing aspect of chronic stress is that people can get used to it. Chronic stress kills through suicide, violence, heart attack, stroke and perhaps even cancer (Miller & Smith, 1997).

The conscious mind can remain unaware of the different levels of stress that it is experiencing, triggering the body's defense mechanisms to silently fight off the effects of stress. Without awareness, a person cannot take the necessary measures to control stress. It is widely believed that the brain controls every organ in the body during a stressful event through the release of chemical hormones. Chemicals produced by the brain during an emotional crisis trigger the immune system to react, causing a spiraling effect that begins to break down the body's natural ability to seek homeostasis.

For example, cancer is the third most common cause of death in the Western world (Myss, 1997). Human beings produce cancer cells daily (Myss, 1997). The question is what triggers the cancer cells to become deadly (Myss, 1997). There are strong correlations with chemical toxins, genetics, excessive radiation, nutrition, viral infections and depression (Myss, 1997). To most scientists and clinicians, the evidence points to depression and how it clobbers the immune system. It has been widely reported that cancer often is diagnosed one to two years following a devastating emotional crisis (Myss, 1993). Stress has a powerful affect on the body. A person's full understanding of the consequences that stress offers is something people have to address, especially when fighting a life-threatening illness.

The two main biological systems involved in mediating the stress response are the sympathetic nervous system and the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal system. The normal role of the sympathetic nervous system is to mediate the unconscious regulation of basic bodily functions. In stressful situations it is also the chief mediator of the body's immediate alarm reaction - the so-called fight-or-flight response (Martin 1997). When the body maintains a constant state of stress, this condition will negatively impact the body's health. People need to learn how to take a time out, to retrain those memory cells by helping the brain reinterpret past stressful events.

Stress and tension are stored in the body, which results in tight shoulders, a stiff neck, backaches, headaches and more. If the physical tension is let go, a feeling of calm will help to handle the stress. Just telling the mind to let go is not enough. Reframing of cognitive stress has to take place in order to reverse or reduce stress. There are intimate links between our minds and the healing capabilities that we all inherit at birth (Miller, 1997). The exercise of journaling and addressing negative thoughts can help to reframe the brains thought process and in turn make significant positive changes in one's emotional health.

The relationship between thoughts, emotions, and the immune system can be explained in physiological terms. When one thinks a thought or feels a feeling, it communicates itself to every cell in the body by way of small protein molecule messengers called neuropeptides. In turn, the hormonal level of the body fluctuates according to one's emotional state.

Thoughts are toxic, and can kill or cure (Siegel, 1989). When humans experience mind-altering processes-for example, meditation, hypnosis, visualization, psychotherapy, love and peace of mind-humans become open to the possibility of change and healing (Siegel, 1989). How a person perceives stress has a dramatic effect on the production of immune molecules in the bloodstream, as well as certain immune cells via messages from the hypothalamus, the control center of the brain. It does not distinguish between positive stress and negative stress; thus the brain reacts by releasing a chemical response. If people are to heal themselves and others, it can be just as important to identify certain mental factors as it is to identify the physiological factors of illness (Miller, 1997). In some cases good stress can also be problematic. The body recognizes both eustress and distress as change, and it is change that causes the problem. The pace of change is so fast in today's society that few are untouched by it.

Some changes may appear beneficial on the surface, yet have negative aspects that become apparent later. A common example is the rapid increase in personal communication devices such as cell phones and pagers. At first glance they seem like marvelous devices that can enhance productivity by enabling more convenient communication with others. This may also work against a person's emotional health. As a society this modern convenience can become invasive. Employers may expect their workers to be "on call" constantly, and it becomes difficult to find quiet time to think, plan, or even to do the primary part of the job. Customers may not respect the difference between the workday and private time, and a person's family life feels the effect.

Stress can also come from physical and emotional sources. Physical causes can include-but are not limited to-overwork, over exercising, excessive partying, jet lag, toxins (such as air pollution and chemicals encountered at work or home), allergies, sleep deprivation, illness, injury and hormonal disruptions in the premenstrual, postpartum and menopausal phases of women's lives. When stress happens in a person's life, it is automatically assessed mentally. The body will not become imbalanced until the brain gives the orders to react. Thus, the brain first tries to determine if the event is threatening, the beginning stages of the stress response.

There are people who have good coping skills and will move through the stressful event easily. It is when a person believes that the immediate stressful event is beyond their coping skills that harmful chronic stress will take over. The key to controlling stress is to be able to see it clearly and understand the reactions the body is making during an emotionally disturbing event.

For the brain to cope with stress, a reappraisal of the problem needs to happen. For example, when a person feels a headache coming on they could take a moment to think about what is going on in their lives at that moment. They will more than likely see the stress that is affecting their body. By just recognizing it, giving it acknowledgment, they will begin the reversing process helping the headache to subside. This simple technique can be incorporated through the journaling process, meditation, deep breathing exercises, or slow relaxing walks.

Stressful situations can come from many every day sources such as marital, family or peer relationship difficulties. Office politics, financial problems, moving or remodeling, juggling schedules of busy family members, taking care of aging parents or disabled children can also contribute to losing touch with the inner self, causing a host of other problems to ensue. Positive emotional events such as falling in love, getting married, having a baby, getting a raise or a new job, and graduating from school, all add to the difficulty of finding joy and happiness, which is a key ingredient toward reducing stress. All of these factors can contribute to long-term stress and cause or exacerbate many physical ailments.

There is a saying "if it is not broken, don't fix it." Unfortunately, humans live by that creed when it comes to taking care of their health. "What I don't know won't hurt me," has become a belief system for many hard-charging individuals. Unfortunately, when a person encounters stress, the body's own belief system automatically generates a biochemical reaction. Adrenalin or cortisol is then produced to enable the body to have the energy needed for the appropriate defensive action, which is selected from the well known Fight or Flight Response. (This is actually comprised of five choices: fighting, fleeing, and freezing, feeding or mating.) This is intended to be a temporary state of affairs.

The human body is designed to function best under conditions of predictability and consistency, known as homeostasis. The normal body rhythms and sleep cycles are part of this equilibrium state. Stress, with its accompanying hormonal changes, disrupts the natural balance, and the body then has to work overtime to return to a state of stability.

In times of continuing stress, the body has to work harder and longer in its attempt to seek balance, and it will soon manifest a number of symptoms. The first to appear is usually some sort of sleep disruption. Other symptoms include decreased energy, increased aches and pains, (especially in the head, neck, shoulders and back), increased sensitivity to pain, and a vague sense of feeling unwell. Humans may also experience gastrointestinal problems such as an upset or nervous stomach, diarrhea or constipation. Anxiety, agitation, and panic attacks are also relatively common.

In attempts to cope, a person often instinctively resorts to counterproductive strategies such as an increase intake of simple sugars, caffeine, alcohol or tobacco; compulsive work or exercise patterns may also be developed. All of these strategies actually tend to increase the stress instead.

Stress, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder. What acts as a stressor for one person may simply be a motivator for another individual. Everyone has a unique tolerance level.

Some stress is good for everyone-though that amount will vary for each individual. With no stress or very low levels, people become lethargic and lackadaisical-often performing at very low levels. Too much stress, however, also results in poor performance as people concentrate more on the stress and often become overwhelmed. With moderate levels of stress, people are generally spurred on to higher performance and are more motivated to produce at higher levels. That "moderate level" is unique to each person.

 



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